CICERO AGAINST Catiline, IN IV. Invective Orations. Containing the whole manner of discovering that Notorious CONSPIRACY. Done into English By CHRISTOPHER WASE. Id. Cic.— Concedat Laurea Lingua. Plin. lib. 7. cap. 3. in fine. Salve primus omnium Parens Patriae appellate, primus in toga triumphum, linguaeque auream morite, & facundiae Latiarumque literarum Parens; atque (ut Dictator Caesar hostis quondam tuas de se scripsit) omnium triumphorum lauream adepte majorem, quanto plus est ingenii Romani termi●●s in tantum promovisse, quam imperii. LONDON, Printed by T. N. for Samuel Lowndes over against Exeter House in the Strand. 1671. To the Worshipful JOSEPH WILLIAMSON Esquire, Secretary to the Right Honourable the Lord ARLINGTON (Principal Secretary of State) Keeper of His Majesty's Papers of State, and a Member of the Honourable House of Commons in Parliament. SIR, THis small Essay does in Justice and Gratitude address itself to your Hands, being the Product of a few Spare-hours while I was conversant about some Occasions of yours, which time you were pleased to express that you put to your Account, while employed to my own Benefit. Of what prodigious Parts this Author was, and indefatigable industry, how grave a Senator, how profound a Politician, how uncorrupt a Magistrate, it needs not that I tell you; nor whether as Tully is worthily accounted the Chief of Orators, so these Consular Invectives may not be esteemed the very Flower of all his Orations. My part is, because I am conscious how hardly those advantages can be discerned through a gross and cloudy Translation, to find out a Competent Judge of such Labours, and a favourable Advocate to excuse the insuperable defects in rendering Languages each by other, which are often inadaequate, and in signification, credit, phrase, variety, incommensurable one with the other. Spirits that are most delicious, we find to be most volatile, and hardly ●ndure the transpor●●ation. Patterns may be with less difficulty matched for the Cloth than the Colour. Tully however cannot be so rudely handled, but an artificial Method, strong Arguments, and divers Figures both of Words and Sentence will discover a sound Constitution. The Change of Customs, Different Laws and Humours may somewhat darken the Complexion: Yet my hope is through all will be discerned Tully. But why do I flatter myself to think that you can find leisure from public and weighty Business to arbitrate in these Scholastic and lighter Speculations? Therefore having first begged that your prudent and painful endeavours may be still successful and accepted to the acquiring new Talents, which you so faithfully improve; and for my sel● requesting to hold such place in your esteems, as a mind ever-studious to be truly thankful, may render me capable of, I take leave to remain SIR, Your humble Servant and Honourer CHR. WASE. Some Ancient Testimonies concerning these Orations. Cic. in Orat. de seipso. A nobis homo audicissimus Catilina in Senat●s accusatus obmutuit. Sal in Conj. Cat. Tum M. Tullius Consul, sive preasentiam ejus timens, sive i●i commotus orationem habuit luculent●m atque utilem Reip. quam postea scriptam edidit. C. Velleius Patercul. l. 2.34. Catilina metu consularis imperii urbe pulsus est Plin. l. 7. c. 30. Sed quo te M. Tulli piaculo taceam?— Tuum Catilina fugit ingenium. Quintil. lib. 2. c. 17. Anon divina M. Tullii Ciceronis eloquentia— Catilinae fregit audaciam? Mart. Dixerat O Mores, O Tempora Tulius olim Sacrilegum struere cum Catilina nefas. The Contents of the Four ensuring Orations, wherein th● Consul I. Adviseth Catiline, then present in the Senate, to forbear the Town. II. Encourages the People, by extenuating the Forces of the Rebel, and reclaiming the secret Complices. III. Reports to the People the particulars of the discovery of the Plot, with the Arraignment and Conviction of the Conspirators at the Bar of the House. IV. Puts it to the Question, What is the Houses pleasure concerning the Prisoner's. The First ORATION Against CATILINE, made in the SENATE. The Argument In the year after the Founding of Rome DC, Lucius Sergius Catilina, a Nobleman of Rome, of excellent Endowments both of Body and Mind, but depraved through ill habits; having been trained up under the Usurper Silvius, and through his whole time practised in Acts of great Licentiousness, stood with many other Competitors for the Consulship; but was accused of Corruption and missed it, Marcus Tullius Cicero and Caius Antonius being chosen: Whereupon he entered into a dangerous Conspiracy of raising a Civil War, cutting off the Principal of the Senate, and Firing the City. On the VI and VII. of November in the Nights were held secret Councils with the chief Conspirators, at the House of one M. Lecca a Roman Senator, where, among other particulars concluded for the carrying on the Design, two Knights then present, undertook early that Morning, under colour of a Visit, to kill Tully in his Bed: But he was immediately advised of this imminent danger from Q. Curius a false Brother, by Fulvia, and that attempt frustrated. The same day, being the VIII. of November, the Consul calls a Senate in the Temple of Jupiter Stator, within the Tower of Rome; where met also Catiline, either to palliate the matter, or purge himself. Upon sight of whom, Cicero being stirred betwixt Fear and Anger, stood up, and thus bespoke him: 1. HOw long, Catiline, will you abuse our pa●ience? How long shall that fury of yours hector down even us too? To what bound shall your unbridled Audaciousness fly out? Has the Night-Guard of the Palace nothing daunted you? Nothing the Watches about the City? Nothing the Fears and Jealousies of the People? Nothing the Concourse of all the honest able Men? Nothing the holding the Senate in this place of strength? Do the looks and faces of all these in presence nothing at all dash you? Are not you aware that all your Plots are discovered? Are not you advised, that your Conspiracy is palpably known to all here? What you resolved upon last Night, what the Night before, where you were, who were in your juncta, of what Debates passed between you, who of us do you think is not fully informed? 2. Oh what times! what a world do we live in! All this the Senate understands, the Consul sees, yet this fellow lives, lives I, and comes into the House, is present at the Public Council; marks with his eyes and designs each one of us for slaughter: Meanwhile We, Courageous Men, think we have discharged our duty to the State, if we can shift his weapons and fury. Long since, Catiline, thou shouldst have been led by the Consul's Order to Execution; upon thine own head should have been turned that destruction which thou hast been so long contriving against all of us. 3. Could that most honourable Person (a) Much of the divisions in the Popular State of Rome, was about a Levelling the State, in such sort a● that the over-weal●hiness of some Grandees, and extreme indigence of the Generality, might be taken away, and a middle Proportion of Estates, the very soul of Democracy, might be established; to support Marriage and enable to Warfare, two great Instruments of Empire. To effect this, C. Licinlus Stolo procured a Law, limiting each Citizen within the possession of 500 Acres; and also to a rate of great and small Ca●tl● and Servants to keep them But as this Law was above 120 years e'er it could be obtained, so within less than 200 years' i● was undermined and quite overthrowns and all Italy found engrossed into the Hands of a few Lords, who leased it out to Slaves and Barbarians. This mischief C. Laeli●s sought first to redress, but was wrought off by the Wealthy Party, and thereby acquired the Title of the Wise. Then Tiberius Gracchus undertook the reviving of it, with the Advice of Crassus the Highpriest, Mucius Scaevola, the Eminent Lawyer, than Consul, and Appius Claudius his Father-in-Law; upon most moderate condi●ions, not of restoring the Lands illegally held and refunding the mean profits, but of parting with them for a valuable consideration, to their poor fellow-citizens (himself, his Father-in-law Appiu●●laudius, and his Brother C. Gracchus being joynt-commissioners for the dividing those Lands.) and contenting themselves with 500 Acres, and their Children with half as much. Yet in the very publishing of it, he was taken off, as was su●pos'd● by Scipio Na●ic●, who was, through the envy of the Fact, fain to retire from his Country. Pub. Scipio, The High Priest, being then a private man, ●lay Tib. Gracchus, when he did but lightly shake the State of the Government: And shall We, Consuls, tamely endure Catiline, striving to lay the World desolate with Fire and Sword? To pass by those instances of an old date, that Quintus Servilius Ahala slew with his own hand (b) Sp. Melius for distributing Corn to the Commons in tim● of great Dearth, fell under suspicion of affecting a Supremacy: Hereupon Qu. Cincinnatus is made Dictator, or Protector, and Captain General; (an Officer not appointed but in time of great fea●, and to continue but Six Months) he nominates Q. Servilius Ahala his Lieutenant General or Magister Equi●um; who summoning Sp. Melius, upon his non-appearance before him, sent and stabbed him. Spurius Melius, when he went about to alter the Government. There has, there has been in Times of Old, such Courage in the State, that Men of Valour have restrained a dangerous Citizen, with more severe punishment than the most violent Enemy. We have now too made against you, Catiline, a strict and grave Act of Senate. The State wants not advice, nor this House resolution. We, I must speak boldly, We Consuls, are wanting in the Execution. 4. The Senate once made an Order, That Lucius Opinius (c) An order for the Safety of the Commonwealth. Hereby wa● committed to the Consuls a Power of levying War and executing Martial Law upon Citizen of Ally, not allowed but in case of extreme danger. the Consul should see that the safety of the Commonwealth should not be molested. One Night did not pass over his head, but (d) C. Gracchus carried on the design of his Brother and among other Laws, that of dividing ●he Lands of Conquest; himself, M. Fulvius ●laccus and Papi●ius Carbo being joynt-commissioners: ●he two former were slain by Order of L. Opinius, and the Son of M. Fulvius sent to intercede for hi● Father, being a comely and bashful youth, when sent back, with charge of coming no more, returning, by his Father's order was cruelly killed in prison, having nev●r bore Arms. L. Opinius was after upon some occasion condemned and banished. Caius Gracchus, descended of a most Noble Father, Grandfathers, Ancestors, was slain upon some suspicion of Factiousness; Marcus Fulvius, a Consular Person, was slain, and all his Children by a like Act of Senate. The security of the State was committed to C. Marius and L. Valerius the Consuls. Did the Government respite L. Saturninus, Tribune of the Commons, and Ca Servilius Praetor, one day from punishment? But We now have left the edge of Authority to grow blunt these twenty days; for we have a like Act of Senate, but shut up in Tables, as a Sword lying in the Scabbard; by which Act of Senate, Catiline, you should have been immediately executed. You live, and that not to abandon, but to fortify your boldness. I desire, my Lords, to be merciful, I desire withal not to be thought careless in so imminent dangers of the Commonwealth. But now I begin to condemn myself of sloth and cowardliness. 5. There is a Leaguer in Italy against the State, pitched at the Entrance into Tuscany, the number of the Enemy increases day by day; but the Commander of that Leaguer, and the General of those Enemies, we see within the Walls, nay, in the very Senate; daily ploting some destruction against the State. If, Catiline, I should now order you to be apprehended, if, to be executed, I think I should have reason to fear, lest all honest men, should rather say, this was done too late by me; then that any should say it was too cruelly done: But for a certain reason I do forbear that, which long since should have been performed: Then will I take thee off, when as no one shall be found so impudent, so desperate, so like thyself, as not to confess it justly done. 6. As long as there shall be any one that dares justify you, you shall live; but so, as now you do, hemmed in by me with many and strong Guards, as not to be able to stir against the Commonwealth. Many Eyes, and Ears too, that you are a little aware of, as hither to they have, shall spy and watch your Actions. Catiline, What would you have more, if neither night can shroud in its darkness your wicked Cabals? Nor a private House within its walls, the words of your Conspiracy? If all come to light, all break forth, change then that mind, be ruled by me, do not think of Slaughter and Burning, you have hands upon you on all sides; all your Plots are as open as the day, which you may recollect with me. 7. Do you remember that I should say in the Senate on the One and twentieth of October, that, On a certain day would be in Arms (which day was to be the 25 th' of the same) Caius Manlius, the Executioner and Instrument of your Treason. Catiline, was I mistaken, not only in a thing, so great, so furious, so incredible; but what is mch more strange, in the very day. I said in the House too, that, You had pitched the 28 th' of the said Mon●th, ●or the assassinating of the Nobles; 〈◊〉 what time many Principal Men ●f the State left the Town, not 〈◊〉 much for their own preservation, as to suppress your designs: Can you deny on that very day ●hat you was so penned up by my Guard and diligence, that you ●ould not stir to prejudice the state; when you said, though ●he rest were gone, The kill of ●s that remained, would serve your ●urn? 8. What when as you were confident you could surprise Prae●este by an assault in the night, on ●he very first of November? Did ●ou observe that that Colony was ●y my Order secured with Guards ●f mine to watch and ward there? You act, you plot, you think nothing, but what I not only hear ●f, but see too, and plainly perceive. Recall to memory with me the other night, and you wi●● find, that I am much more intensely vigilant, for the preservation than you for the destruction of th● State. I say, that the night biafore last, you came among th● Vine-dressers, I must speak plain● to the house of Marcus Lecca, tha● very many Abettors of your fu●● and treachery, had their meeting there; Dare you deny it? Wh● do not you speak? I will make 〈◊〉 appear, if you deny it; for I se● (e) Sallust reckons up xi Senators of the Conspiracy, Lentulus, Antonius, Longinus, Cethegus, P, & Ser. Silvius, Vargunteius, Annius, Lecca, Bestia, & Curius. some here in the Senate tha● were there with you. 9 Immortal Gods! wherea●bouts are we? What a Government have we? In what City d● we live? In this, this very place are some, of our own House, m● Lords, of this most Venerabl● and Grave Council of all th● World, which project my ruin and all yours, together with th● destruction of this City and the Empire of the World. These ●ersons, I that am Consul, be●old, and take their Votes about ●he Government; and those that ●hould have been cut off by the sword, I do not yet wound with my word. You were then, Cat●●ine, at Lecca's house that night; You divided Italy into Posts, you appointed every one which way it was concluded he should march; you selected whom to leave at Rome, and whom to carry with yourself; you divided the several parts, at which the City was to be ●ired; you gave assurance you would speedily leave the Town; only, you said, One petty business, that is, my being alive, stayed your journey. There were (f) C. Cornelius Sulls and M. C●●●thegus. Appian. Sallust joins with C. Cornelius, L. V●●●gunteiu●, but him he had nominated as a Senator before. two Roman Knights presently replied, They would remove that obstruction, and promised they would that very night, a littl● before day kill me in my Bed. 10. I was informed of all th●● full as soon as your Company w●● broke up, and secured and guarde● my house the better; kept ou● those that you sent in the morning to give me a Visit, having befor● told several persons that such woul● come at the very same time. Whic● things being so, Catiline, hold o● the course you have begun, ge● you out of Town at length; th● Gates are open; take your Jour●ney. That Army of Manlius● does too long want you to head it carry out all your Complices wit● you, at least as many as may be● rid the City, you will deliver m● from much fear, so there be but ● Wall between you and me. You ca● no longer continue among Us, ● will not bear it, I will not suffer it● I will not endure it. 11. Great thanks be to the Immortal Gods, and particularly to jupiter Stator, the most ancient Guardian of this City, that we have so often already escaped this so villainons, so dreadful, and so dangerous a plague to the State; the safety of the Government must not any more be hazarded in one person. As long, Catiline, as you plotted against me, Consul Elected, I secured myself, not by any Public Guard, but my private diligence. When as at the last Consular Election, you would have slain me the Consul and your other Competitors in the Field; I dashed your wicked attempts, by the assistance and strength of my friends, without giving any alarm to the Public: In a word, as often as you struck at me, I opposed you by mine own interest; although I saw, that my destruction was inseparable from the great affliction of the State. 12. But now with open face, you strike at the whole State, you bid ruin and desolation to the Temples of the Immortal Gods, to the Buildings of the City, to the l●fe of all the Citizens: In sum, to all Italy. Wherefore, since I dare not execute that which were principally to be done, and is proper to this Empire, and the severity of our Ancestors, I will do that which is more gentle, as to censure; more useful, as to the public safety. For if I should order you to be slain, the relics of your Complices would still stick in the Commonwealth: But if you, which I frequently advise you to, shall march off, a great and dangerous sink in the State, of your Comrades, shall be drained out. 13. What's the matter, Catiline? Do you make any question to do that at my Order, which you were before a doing of your own accord? The Consul commands an Enemy to go out of Town, Do you ask, Whether to Banishment? I do not command you. But if you ask my Counsel, I advise you; For what is there, Catiline, which can any longer be pleasing to you in the City? wherein there is none, bating that Gang of desperate Conspirators, but fears you; none but hates you. (g) He is reported ●o have married her that w●s judged his Daughter, to have killed his Brother, and got him after he was dead excepted from pardon. What mark of domestical baseness has not been branded upon your life? What private disgrace does not asperse your Name? Have your Eyes ever been refrained from any lust? your Hands from any attempt, or any villainy from your whole body? What young man is there by your pleasures inveagled, whom you have not furnished, either with a weapon to boldness or with an in●enrive to lust? 14. For example, newly (h) He is employed to have made ●way his first Wife, to make ● room for Aurelia Orestilla; whom, because she did not like to have a grown Step-son, he is also recorded to have gratified with the taking him also off out of the way. when by the death of your former Wife, you had made house room for a second match, did you not by that villainy add another incredible villainy? which I pass by, and am well content should be wrapped up in silence, lest such an inhuman act should have been thought to have had being, or not to have been avenged under this Government. I pass by the decay of your Estate, all which you will find to hang over your head next Quarter-day. I come to those points, which do not concern the private reproach of your Vices, nor the necessitousness and baseness of your Family; but do more nearly relate unto the well-being of the State, and the life and safety of us all. 15. Can it be delightful to you, Catiline, to behold the light o● this world, and to draw the breath of this air, when as you know, there is none of these present, that is not informed that (i) When L. ●orqua●u● and L. Cotta designed consuls, were to ●nter upo● their Office, L. Catiline, P. An●ronius, and C. Piso, about th● 5 th' of December conspired to kill them; afterwards they put it off to the 5 th' of the following February, what tim● they combined no● only to kill th● Consuls, bu● most of th● Senators● which had been effected, had not Catiline been overforward to give the word, before all the Conspirators we●e m●t together: this was two years past, and is called his former Conspiracy. the day before New-years-day, Lepidus and Tullus being Consuls, you (k) It was forbidden to wear Arms in the Place of Assembly, in the judgement Hall; and in the 〈◊〉 ● wore Arms in the Assembly, that you had got a Crew together to kill the Consuls and Nobles; that no good meaning of yours, nor yet fear, but the fortune of the Commonwealth, hindered your treason and rage: But I pass by those things, as neither obscure, nor long since committed. How often would you have killed me, when designed, how often since entered, upon the Consulship? How many passes of yours, so made, that they seemed unavoidable, have I put by by a slight turn, and as the word is, with the motion of my body? You plot, you pursue, you contrive nothing, but I have timely notice of it; and yet for all that, you will never give over working and designing. 16. How many, many times already has that Dagger been wrung out of your hands? How often by some casualty dropped and slipped down? yet you cannot for your life be without it, which Dagger, under what Vow and Consecration it is, I know not, that you should have such a superstition, that it must needs be stuck up for a Monument in the Consul's heart. But now, what life do you lead? for I will so deal with you, not as though I were moved with anger, as I have reason, but wi●h compassion, as you have no reason to expect. You came even now into the Senate, did any one of this great Company of so many friends and acquaintance of yours, do you any reverence? If such a thing as this never happened to any in the memory of man, do you wait for them to speak out their indignation, when you are already cast by the grand consent of their silence? Nay at your coming in, great room was made for you; farther, ●ll the Consular Persons, who had been oftentimes designed by you for slaughter, so soon as you sat down, sat them farther from you, leaving that part of the Seats bare and empty. 17. How do you think that is to be taken by you? Truly if my Servants were in such fear of me, as your Fellow Citizens stand in dread of you, I should think fit to quit my House: Do not you so think it fit to quit the Town? And if I saw myself under so great suspicion and displeasure of my Countrymen, though unjustly, I would rather withdraw myself out of their sight, than be under their continual frowns. And do you, when your Conscience must tell you, that you have incurred the just and long deserved hatred of all, make any scruple to avoid their sight and presence, whose very souls and hearts you break? Suppose your Parents were afraid of, and fallen out with you, and you could by no means recover their favour, I conceive you would retire some whither out of their sight. Now your Country, which is the common Parent of us all, hates and fears you, and judges of you, that for this great while, you unnaturally contrive nothing but treason against her. Will you neither reverence her Authority? nor be guided by her Direction? nor stand in fear of her Power? 18. Which, Catiline, thus addresses to you, and in a manner, thus silently be-speaks you; There has been no violence for these many years past, but by your abettment; no lewdness but by your contrivance; you are the only man, that have carried away free and unpunished the murders (l) T● pass by those of lesser mark● he slew of those in the Black Book o● Silvius, L. Caecilius, M. Volumenius, L. Tanusiu●, and M. Marius, Gratidianus, one dear to the People and intimate with Tully, whose ●eeking head and full of spirits, be carried in his hand to Silvius, from the one end of the City, beyond the Bridge, to the other. of many Citizens; you, (m) When L. Catiline was Chief justice in the Province of Africa, he so pillaged the subject, that he was accused of Bribery by Clodius, whom he so corrupted, that he shamefully betrayed the Cause, and so came off; again being indicted of Murder, for his many slaughters in the Action of Silvius, by the favour of the Nobility, who favoured Silvius, he was cleared. the vexation and plundering of the Allies; you have not been only so great as to slight the Laws and judgements, but also to pervert and break through them. Your former Actions, although not to be born with, yet I digested as well as I could: but now, that I should be all over in a fright for your only sake; that at the least stir Catiline should be suspected: no Plot can be thought to be laid against me, but through your Treachery, is intolerable: Wherefore with draw and rid me of this terror; if true, to prevent my destruction; if false, to remove at length my fears. 19 If your Country should thus address to you, ought she not to obtain it; although she could not force you? Nay further, you have offered yourself into custody; nay, you said, To clear you of all suspicion, you would go dwell with Marcus Lepidus; who not entertaining you, you had the confidence to come to me, and desired that, I would secure you in my house. When you had from me too this Answer, that, I could by no means be safe with you under the same roof, that am in great danger, whilst we are within the same City Wall. You came to Q. Metellus the Praetor, by whom, when you were rejected, you took up your Lodging at your own Comrades, honest Marcus Marcellus: Him in good time you took, as one very careful to watch you, and very acute to discover you, and very courageous to punish you. But how far may he be thought from Goal and Irons, who judges himself worthy of Restraint? 20. Which things being so, Catiline, do you make any scruple, if you cannot be contented to die here, to go into some foreign place? and to commit that life of yours, conveyed away from many due and well deserved punishments, to Exile and Obscurity? Move it, say you, in the house, for that is your request; and if the Senate shall vote, you must be banished, you say, you will submit. I will not move it, which is a thing goes much against my disposition; and yet I will so order the matter, that you may so understand the sense of the House concerning you. Catiline, Go out of the Town, put the State out of fear, go your way into Banishment, since you look for that word. What is the matter, Catiline? Do you mind? Do you observe the silence of all present? They are contracted, they are still. What, do you expect they should speak and give Order, whose meaning you will know by their silence? 21. But if I had said the same thing, to this worthy young Man, P. Sextius, if as much to Ma. Marcellus, a Person of great Valour, the Senate would immediately have laid violent hands, with all the reason in the world, upon me, that am now Consul, in this very Sanctuary, where we are: But for you, Catiline, being they are quiet, they give their consent; being they are contented, they vote it: being silent, they proclaim it. Nor only the Senators, whose Authority it seems is with you very dear, their lives cheap; but also those Roman Knights, Men of great honour and worth, and other valiant Citizens, which attend at the Senate, whose number you might see, and perceive their affections, and even now plainly hear their very words; whose hands and weapons for this good while, I have had much ado to keep off from you. I can easily prevail upon them, that if you leave these parts, which you are plotting to ru●n, they shall all wait upon you to the City Gates. 22. But wherefore, do I talk, Can any thing daunt you? Can you ever be reform? That you should ever think of withdrawing? Intent to leave the Town? Would the Immortal Gods would give you such a frame of heart● Although I foresee, if you upon the terror of these words, should take up a Resolution to go to Banishment, what a storm of Envy would hang over us? Though not so much at the present, whilst the memory of your villainies is fresh, but in after times. But I stand not much upon that, so the Calamity might be your own in particular, and severed from the dangers of the State. But that you should be sensible of your own Vices, or fear the Penalties of the Laws, or comply with the necessity of the times, is a thing not to be expected: for, Catiline, you are none of those that either shame should keep you back from baseness, fear from hazard, or reason from rage. 23. Wherefore, as I have often said to you before, go your ways, and if you have a mind, to procure me ill will, your Enemy, as you give out, go directly to Banishment. I shall hardly endure the censures of men, if you do so; scarcely stand under the load of tha● Envy, if you should go into Banishment at the Consul's Order: But if you had ●ather be instrumental to my praise and glory, match out with your dangerous Crew of Traitors, go straightways to Manlius, stir up the discontented people, separate your ●elf from the well affected, make War upon your Country, triumph in your unnatural robberies, that you may be thought not to have been cast out by me among strangers, but invited to your own. 24. But what need I invite you, who I know, have sent some to wait for you in Arms at Forum Aurelium. I know a day is pitched upon and agreed with Manlius, by whom I know too that Silver Eagle, which I trust will turn to the ruin and confusion of you and all yours; which set in your House was the Chapel of all your Treasons; is sent away. Can you want that Image, which you used to pray to, when you went out upon a Murder; from whose Altars you often carried your polluted hand to the assassinating of Citizens? Go your ways at last, whither that unbridled and raging lust of yours has long time hurried you; for this occasion does not bring you any grief, but a kind of incredible pleasure; to such sottishness has nature bred, your will practised, and fortune guided you. You never longed for, I do not say, Peace, but any War, save such as is unnatural. You have got a party of lewd persons, not only lost in their fortunes, but also in their hopes. Here, what complacence will you find? What joy will you triumph in? What pleasure will you rant in? when amidst so great a number of followers, you will neither hear of an honest man, nor see one. Those labours of yours, that are so much cried up, have been trained to this course of life: Lying perdue, not only to watch a Mistress, but to take a Purse; Watchfulness both over the sleep of married men, and the Estates of the murdered. You have now an opportunity to show that you● brave hardiness in hunger, cold, and want of all things, wherewith you shall shortly find yourself pinched. I gained so much, what time I put you from the Consulship, that you might rather in Banishment attempt, than in the supreme Government effect, the ●in of the State● and that the thing, which was treasonably by you undertaken, might rather ●ear the Name of Rebellion, than War. 27. Now, My Lords, That I may remove, and deprecate from me, a kind of almost just Complaint of my Country, mark I beseech you, attentively what I shall say, and treasure it up faithfully in your minds and memories: For, if my Country, which is far dearer to me than my life; if all Italy, if the whole Commonwealth should speak to me, Marcus Tu●ly, What do you mean? Would you suffer him to go forth, that you know certainly to be a Rebel; that you see will be the General of the War; that you are sensible, is expected as Chief Captain in the Enemy's Camp; having been the Contriver of the Treason, the Chief of the Conspiracy, the Raiser of the Slaves and desperate Citizens: that he may be thought not so much let out, as set on the Town? Will not you command him to be put in Irons, to be carried to Execution, to be punished with death? 28. What I pray hinders? Is it the old Custom? Nay often in this State, Persons out of Commission have put dangerous Citizens to death: Or the Laws which have been made about the punishing free Citizens of Rome? But never in this State have those, who revolted from the Government, preserved the Privileges of Freemen. Do you fear the Envy of Posterity? Now you fairly requite the People of Rome, who has exalted you, a Person known for yourself only without any Commendation of your Ancestors, so early to the supreme Magistracy, through all the degre●s of subordinate Offices; if for envy or the fear of any danger, you neglect the safety of your Countrymen. But if there be any fear of Envy, is the Censure of Severity and Courage more greatly to be feared, than that of Baseness and Cowardice? Do you not think, when Italy shall be made desolate with War, the Cities plundered, the Houses afire, you shall then fall under a flagrant Eny? 29. To these most sacred words of the State, and the minds of those men, which are of the same judgement, I shall answer a word: Had I, my Lords, Judged it most expedient for Catiline to be put to death, I had not allowed that Swordplayer one hours respite to live: For if those most eminent and honourable Patriots were so far from polluting, that they rather ennobled themselves with the blood of Saturninus and the Gracchis, and Flaccus, and of many others in former times: Truly I have no reason to fear, lest this Murderer of the Citizens being slain, any envy should rise against me for the future. But if never so much did hang over me, yet I was always of this Judgement, to think Envy gotten by Virtue to be no Envy but Glory. 30. Although there are some in this House, who either not se● what is imminent, or dissembl● what they see; who have cherished the hopes of Catiline with ●e●iss Votes, and have confirmed ●he rising Conspiracy, by not believing it: whose Authority many, not only out of malice, but of simplicity following, had I executed him, would have said, it had been a cruel and tyrannical Act. Now I understand, if he shall arrive, whither he intends at the Camp of Manlius, no body will be so foolish, as not to see it was a Plot; no body so bold as not to confess it: But if he singly was slain, I understand this plague of the State might be a little suppressed, but not wholly extinguished: But if he fly out, and carry his party along with him, and gather to the same place all other desperate persons, from every part gleaned up; not only this so ripe a plague of the Commonwealth will be extinguished and rooted out, but also the very strings and seeds of all mischief. 31. For, my Lords, this great while, are we engaged in the danger, and the snare of this Conspiracy. But now how it comes to pass I know not, the ripeness of all Treasons, and old rage, and boldness, is broke forth in the time of our Consulship. Now if this one person shall be taken off, we shall be thought perhaps relieved of our cares and fears; but the danger will stick close, and will be locked up in the bowels and veins of the Commonwealth; as often times men in an acute Sickness, when they are tossed with hea● and fever, if they drink cold water, seem at first to be eased; then afterwards, are more grievously and violently afflicted: so this Disease in the Body Politic being abated by his punishment, will return more violently, if the rest be left alive. 32. Wherefore, my Lords, Let the Malignants fall off, let them separate from the honest party, let them draw to a head: In a word, as I have often before said, Let them be parted from us with a Wall; let them leave plotting against the Consul in his own house, investing the Judge's Bench, surrounding the Senate with their Swords, making Fire-balls and Brands, to burn the City. Lastly, let it be written in every one's Forehead how he stands affected to the State. I promise you this, my Lords, there shall be so great diligence in us Consuls, so much authority in you, so much courage in the Roman Knights, so great consent in the honest party, that you may see the whole Plot discovered, laid open, suppressed, and punished, by the going out of Catiline. 33. (n) The Heathens had a strong Superstition about the accidents, or Voices of Birds or Men, particularly at the Entering upon a Journey, especially in any great Undertaking ● that they were ominous, if good, to the ●lessing, if bad, to the Blasting their Design. Therefore he thus ●oe-speaks ill success to his designed Expedition. With this Prayer after you, Catiline, wishing, It may prove preservation to the State, ruin and confusion to yourself, and destruction to all those, who have combined themselves with you in all villainy and treason. Go your way to an unnatural and rebellious War: (o) This being spoken in the Temple of Jupiter S●ator, hath a greater presence of 〈◊〉 and Devotion, and a kind of solemn Excommunication, some Image of ●hich was even among the Heathens in use towards men guilty of Treasons, Murders, and such high Misdemeanours. And thou, Oh Juppiter, who at the same dedication as the City, wert consecrated by Romulus, whom we truly style, the Stay of this State and Empire; repulse him and his Complices from the Altars, and other Temples; from the Houses and Walls of the City; from the life and fortunes of all the Citizens: And all the Maligners of the well-affected, Enemies of their Country, Plunderers of Italy, confound them both quick and dead with eternal punishment. The Second ORATION Against CATILINE. The Argument. Catiline having flung out of the Senate, went home, and there reflecting upon the unsuccessfulness of the Morning attempt upon the Person of the Consul, and seeing the City strongly guarded, concluded it safest with what forces he could suddenly and secretly carry wit him, to gain the Camp of Manlius: Wherefore having given Lentulus and Cethegus in charge to strengthen his Faction in the City, and at convenient season to put in execution the Results of their former Counsels, in order to a general Insurrection, when he should draw up with his Army towards the City: at Midnight he left Rome, with 300 in company. The next day, being the IX. of November, Tully calls the People to the Place of Assembly, both to justify to them his challenging Catiline of Conspiracy the day before, and to warn them to stand upon their Guard against the Confederates that still remain behind in the Town. Gentlemen, 1. AT last with much ado, have we either expelled, or let out, or else waited upon L. Catiline of himself, going out of Town, foaming with rage, breathing Treason, unnaturally plotting the destruction of his Country, and menacing you and this City with Fire and Sword. He is gone, he is got his way, he is escaped, he is broke loose: No longer shall any mischief against this Town be brewed by that Monster and Prodigy of Men within the Town. And without controversy have we prevailed against him, that was the only Ringleader of this Intestine War: For no longer now shall that (a) Stabbing was infamous in all Ages, whence those Braves or Assassins that were noted for Cowardly and Desperate lying in wait to murder men● were from the Poniard which they carried, being in Latin Sica, called Sicar●i. Dagger be busy amidst the ribs of us; nor shall we be afraid in (b) Mars' Field was a piece of Town ground (the Ancient Crown-land) which the Romans at the expulsion of Tarquin the Proud, seized and converted to the use of Electing their Magistrates in it. Now there was a Statu●e in Rome, Tha● none should bring a Weapon in● to the Place for Assembly of the People, nor into the Senate, nor into the judgement Hall. But Catiline had in ● former Conspiracy come to the Consular Election armed, with design t● cut off the Consuls. And now Tully some few days before, at the late Election of Consuls, as going in fear of his life, had come into the Field of Mars, wearing a great remarkable Coat of Male. the Field of Mars nor in the Marketplace, nor in the Senate, nor in a word, within our own doors. He has quitted his ground, when he fled the City. We shall now openly wage a just War with a declared Enemy, no body contradicting: undoubtedly we have destroyed and bravely vanquished him, what time we put him from private plotting into open Rebellion. 2. But that he did not carry ou● of Town, as he designed, the point of his Sword stained in blood; that he went and we alive; that we have wrested the weapon out of his hand; that he left behind him the Citizens in safety, and the Town standing: what mortification do you think it to be, and heart-breaking to him? Now lies he grovelling on the ground, and is sensible that he is a lost and ruined man, and oftentimes turns his Eyes back upon the City, lamenting, it has escaped his ravenous Jaws; which City seems to me to look more cheerfully, since it has disgorged and cast out so pestilent a fellow. 3. But if there be any now, as all of you ought to be, affected, that upon this very point, wherein my Oration does boast and triumph, should greatly accuse me, because I did not rather apprehend so Capital an Enemy than let him escape; it is none of my fault, Sirs, but the times; L. Catiline should have been long since taken off and executed, and both old Precedents and the severity of this Empire, and the public interest required it at my hands. But how many, think you, were there, who would not believe my Information? How many, that out of simplicity could not have thought it? How many that even justify it? How many, that out of corrupt Principles, abetted it? Now if upon taking him off, I had judged all your danger removed, long since had I cut off L. Catiline, not only at the hazard, of losing my reputation, but also my life. 4. But when I plainly saw, though you had been all satisfied in the cause, if I had put him to death according to his demerit, it could not be that I might prosecute the Complices, so much should I be maligned: I brought it to this pass, that you might then openly fight, when you manifestly saw your Enemy; which Enemy, Gentlemen, how much you need fear, now he is gone, you may understand by this, that I am troubled at nothing more than that he went out of Town so ill attended; would he had carried along with him all his forces! He took me out Tongillus, that he was scandalously reported to have been fond of in his Childhood; Publicius and Munatius, whose debts contracted in Taverns, could bring no fear to the State: He left behind him men, how considerable? o● of what vast debts? how potent? how noble? 5. Therefore that Army of his● in respect of our gallic Legions, and that Levy, which Q. Metellus made in the Picenian and gallic Country, and these forces, which are daily listed by us, I greatly slight, an Army made up of desperate old men, debauched Farmers, and Country Beggars and Bankrupts, men that had rather forfeit their Recognizance than quit his Colours, whom if I should show, not so much as the Front of our Army, but only the Sheriffs Writ, they will drop down, These that I see flaunting in the Market, nay, sitting in the Senate, that are perfumed, that shine in Purple; I had rather he had carried out his Soldiers with him; who, if they tarry here, take notice, that not so much that Army, as these, that absent from their Colours, are to be feared by us; and so much the more dangerous are they: because they are sensible that I am informed of their designs; and yet are not concerned at it. 6. I see, to whose share Apulia is allotted, who has Tuscany, who the Picenian Country, who the gallic, who it was, that required he might carry on the massacring and firing the City. They perceive all their Plots of the other night have been brought to me, I declared them yesterday in the Senate, Catiline himself was put in a fright, fled upon it. What do these stay for? I assure them they are much mistaken, if they suppose my forbearance will always continue. What I waited for, I have already attained; that you might all be convinced there is a manifest Plot against the State, unless perchance there be some, that imagine men of Catiline's temper do not abet Catiline. There is no longer room for patience, the nature of affairs calls aloud for severity, yet I will still allow them one favour; let them be gone, let them march out, let them not suffer poor Catiline to pine away, for lack of them. I will show them the way, he is gone the Aurelian Road, if they make haste, they will overtake him before night. 7. Oh happy State, if it could drain out the sink of the Town. In truth, upon the throwing off Catiline only, the State seems to me much eased, and on the mending hand: For what mischief or villainy could be devised or thought on, which he did not contrive? What Sorcerer in all Italy, what Hector, what Highwayman, what Assassin, what Parricide, what Forger of Wills, what Cheat, what Whoremaster, what Prodigal, what Adulterer, what infamous Strumpet, what Debauchel of Youth, what debauched, what desperate person can be found, but confesses Catiline was his great acquaintance? What Murders have been committed these late years, that he had not a hand in? What abominable Rape, but of his setting. 8. Now where was there ever such a spirit of inveigling youth as in him? who did himself love some unnaturally, was scandalously prostituted to the unnatural love of others; some he promised the enjoyment of their lust, others the death of their Parents, not only by his instigation, but by his assistance● and now, how of a sudden has he got together a great many men of desperate fortunes, not only from the Town, but from the Country also? There is none in debt, either in Rome, or any corner of all Italy, that he has not drawn in to his incredible Confederacy in Treason. 9 And that you may perceive his different Inclinations in things of a con●●ary Nature, there is none in the Fencing School, any thing forward to bold attempts, but confesses, he was Catiline's Intimate: None any thing wanton or loose on the Stage, but gives out that he and Catiline were in a manner all one. And yet this very Person, inur'd to suffer Cold and Hunger and Thirst, and watch in pursuit of Whoredom and Villainy, was cried up by these his Companions as one hardy; when as the Aids of Industry and Instruments of Virtue, were wasted upon Lust and Violence. 10. Now if his Comrades would go along with him, if the scandalous Crew of desperate Persons would quit the Town, happy should we be, the State blessed, and an Immortal Renown upon my Consulship! for the lusts of men nowadays are grown immoderate, their attempts inhuman and unsufferable; they think of nothing but Massacres, but firing, but plundering, they have spent their own Estates, they have squandered away their Fortunes, their Stock has been long since gone, now their Credit begins to fail them; yet they have the same pride as when they had a plentiful Estate. Now if amidst their Drinking and Gaming, they only regarded Riot and Whoring, they were indeed little hopeful, but yet tolerable. But who can endure this, that Cowards should lay wait for the Valiant, Fools for the Wise, Sots for the Sober, Sluggards for the Vigilant? That sit me at Treats with their Misses in their Laps, their Brains swimming with Wine, Stomaches over charged with Meat, Garlands on their Heads, daubed with Sweet Ointment, weakened with Whoring, and belch out in their talk the slaughter of the honest Party and the firing of the City. 11. Over whom I am confident there hangs some fate, and that the rewards long since due to their boldness, baseness, treachery, and lust, is either imminent, or certainly approaching. Whom, if my Consulship, because it cannot cure, shall cut off, it will not prolong some small and inconsiderable time, but many Ages to the State: for there is no Nation, which we need fear, no King that can wage war with the People of Rome: (c) Pompey had a● that time cleared the Mediterranean of Pirates, and had well-nigh dispatched the long Wa● with Mithridates' King of Pontus. All foreign Affairs are quietly settled by Sea and Land, through the valour of one man; the Plot is within; the danger locked within; the Enemy is within: We have a Conflict with Luxury, with Madness, with Treachery. I declare myself, Gentlemen, General in this War. I am contented to be maligned by desperate persons. What can be healed, I will use all means to heal; what must be cut off, I will not suffer to spread to the common destruction: Therefore either let them be gone, or let them be quiet; or, if they do abide, both in Town and in the same mind, let them expect what they deserve. 12. B●t some there are, gentlemans, that say, Catiline was by me thrown into Banishment. Which, if I could effect with a wo●d speaking, I would throw out them that say so. For he, I'll warrant you, poor, timorous, and over-modest man, could not bear the reproof of the Consul: assoon as commanded to go into Banishment, obeyed Orders. Nay yesterday, when I was almost murdered in my own house, I summoned a Senate into jupiter Stator's Temple: I informed the Senator's of the whole matter, whither when Catiline was come, what Senators spoke to him? who saluted him? In a word, who looked upon him, so well as a forlorn Citizen, and not rather as a most dangerous Enemy? Nay the Chief of that Order left the part of the Seat, towards which he came, naked and empty. 13. Hereupon, I, the severe Consul, that throw men into Banishment with a word speaking, questioned Catiline, Whether he had been present, or no, at the (d) It was a fundamental Law in Rom● of the XII. Tabl●s, not to h●ld Night Me●●ings within the City● and there was a ●●●binian Statute, Q●● conciones ullas cl●ndestinas in 〈◊〉 ● be con●●avisset, more majorum capitall sup●licio mult●retur. Po●tius Latr●●, H● that s●all draw together 〈◊〉 Meetings within 〈◊〉 City● 〈◊〉 suffer th● pains of High Treason, which was with the Romans to 〈◊〉 ●yed to ●he Whipping-Post, scourged, and beheaded. Night Meeting in M. Lecca's House ● when he, though bold enough, yet self-convinced, was at first silent, I made further discovery, what he treated of that Night, where he had been● what h● had resolved upon for the next night; and informed how the whole Course of the War wa● projected by him. When as he stopped and stayed, I questioned him, Why he should make any demur of going thither, whither he had long since intended● having I know, sent before, his Arms, his Axes, his Rods, his Trumpets, his Ensigns, and that Silver Eagle, to which he had set up at home a Chapel for his Treacheries. 14. Did I throw him into Banishment, that I saw was already entered upon a War? For that Captain Ill warrant you, that has encamped in the Fesulan Country, proclaimed War against the Roman people upon his own account, and that Camp does not now wait for Catiline to be their General, and now being thrown into Banishment, he will ●urn aside to (e) Ca●iline leaving the Town, wrote Le●ters upon the way to his friends and the Prime of the Nobility, that being he saw himself circumvented by false Accusation, and could ●ot withstand the 〈…〉 of his 〈…〉 with dr●●n to 〈◊〉 se●●les; 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 no● 〈◊〉 he we●● conscious 〈◊〉 himself of any such crime, but to prevent all occasions 〈◊〉 disturbing the public Peace. 〈◊〉 is ● famous Port in France, planted from Asia in 〈◊〉 ●imes of the Persian Empire; of old renowned for 〈◊〉, ●ith other Virtues, Policy, Learning, and an eminent affection to th● Roman State. Mars●illes, as they give out, and not into this Camp● Oh unhappy condition, not only of steering, but of saving the State. Now, if L. Catiline, hemmed in, and disabled by my Counsels, Labours, and Dangers, should take a sudden fright, alter his purpose, desert his Party, abandon his resolution of raising War, from this Carrier of Treason and Rebellion, should turn his Course into flight and Exile; he will not be reported to have been by me disarmed of the weapons of his insolency, nor astonished and affrighted by my diligence, nor put besides his hopes and endeavours; but uncondemned innocent man, to have been thrown into Banishment by the Consul, with foul and threatening words: and some will have it be thought, if he shall do so, not that he was guilty, but unfortunate, nor that I was a most diligent Magistrate, but a most cruel Tyrant. 15. I can well afford, Gentlemen, to bear the storm of this false and unreasonable aspersion, so the danger of this dreadful and unnatural War be diverted from you, let it, since they will have it so, be said that he was thrown out by me, so he do, but go into Banishment: but take my word he will not do so. Sirs! I shall never wish of the Immortal Gods, for the abating any hard opinion of me, that you should hear L. Catiline is in the head of the Enemy's Army, and marching in the Field; yet within three days you will hear it: and I much more fear the other thing, lest the time may once come, wherein it prove a greater fault that I let him go out, than that I threw him out: But there being some, that say he is persecuted, when he went of himself, what would those men have said, if he had been executed? 16. Although these very men, that give out that Catiline is gone to Marseilles, do not so much complain, as fear that it is so. None of them has so much tenderness for him, but had rather that he should go to Manlius than to those of Marseill●s. But, in truth, had he never before designed, what he now goes about, yet he had rather be killed in Rebellion than live in Banishment. But now, when as nothing has yet befallen him, besides his own desire and design, but that he went out of Rome, and we alive; let us rather wish he would, then complain that he doth go into Banishment. 17. But why are we thus long discoursing of one Enemy? and that Enemy that now declares himself so, and whom I no longer fear; because there is, as I always desired, a Wall between us; we speak nothing yet of those, that dissemble that tarry behind at Rome, that keep amongst us? whom I do not so much endeavour to punish, if it could any way be prevented, as to cure and reconcile them to the State. Nor do I see, why that should not be possible, if they take my Counsel; for I will relate to you, gentlemans, of what sort of men those forces are made up, then will I apply to the particulars the best Remedy my advice and persuasion can provide. 18. One Rank of them is such, as, though they have great debts, yet have greater Estates; out of love to which, they can by no means afford to get themselves clear. The appearance of these men has the fairest show, for they are substantial men; but their intention and pretence is most impudent. Should you be plentiful and splendid in Lands, in Houses, in Plate, in Retinue, and in all Accommodations, and do you stick to diminish some of your Estate, and to purchase a good reputation? Why, what do you look for? For War? What? Do you then think in the Common Desolation, that your possessions shall be sacred and untouched? For (f) In Cases of extraordinary public Necessities, there have been framed Acts or P●oclamations, for the Releasing all old Debts to a certain day. Such was the Jubilee among the Hebrews, such the Act called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among the Greek●, as t●●se Novae Tabulae of the Romans; and such in some measure are Acts in these later times, for the releasing of poor Prisoner's, that shall swear themselves not worth 5 or 10 l. a Bill to cancel old Debts? They are much mistaken, that look for that from Catiline; I will help them to such a Bill, but it must be a Bill of Sale. For, they who have Estates, can be preserved by no other means; which, if they would have done sooner, neither (which, is the most foolish thing in the World) tyre out their Rents with paying interest; we might have had more able and honest Citizens of them. But such men as these I think not very much to be feared, because they may either be reclaimed, or, if they shall continue in the same mind, they seem rather to me, such as will join their prayers than their arms against the State. 19 Another sort is of those, that, though they are deeply in debt, yet they affect Tyranny, they would be Princes; those places which they cannot look for, if the State continue in peace, if it be (g) Like the Fish●rm●n in ●he Fable, who troubled the Waters, ●hat ●e might c●tch the ●ore Fish. disturbed, they hope they shall attain: Who should have this advice given them, the selfsame, as all the rest, to despair of obtaining that, which they attempt: First of all, that I myself am vigilant, active, provident over the State; then the well-affected are in great Courage, great Concord, in very great number; that there are great Forces of Soldiery; lastly, that the Immortal Gods will aid and assist this invincible People, most renowned Empire, and most beautiful City, against such a prodigious Treason. But grant they had obtained, what they pursue with such madness, do they hope, that in the ashes of the Town, and blood of their Citizens, which with a traitorous and an unnatural heart they have conspired, themselves should be Consuls, or Protectors, or indeed Kings? Do they not see, that they lust after that, which, if they could compass, must needs be granted some Fugitive or Fencer? 20. A third sort is well stricken in years, yet trained up to hardiness; in which rank is Manlius himself, whose Charge Catiline has now taken. (h) Silvius having overthrown the Marian Party and mastered the State, placed his Victorious Army in the attainted Lands; which h● divided amongst 47 Legions. These are persons of those Plantations, that Silvius settled, all which I take to be of honest Citizens' and valiant Men. But these are Planters, who live too high and pro●d upon their unexpected and new got moneys: These, whilst they build like Princes, whilst they pride themselves in their Manor Houses, Coaches, great Retinues, Entertainments, Furnitures, are sunk into so great Debt, that if they would ever come out, Silvius, must be again raised from the Dead by these: who have also drawn in some Farmers, poor and needy men, upon the same expectation of their old Rapines; both of whom, I place, Sirs, in the same Rank of Robbers and Plunderers. But I advise them this, Let them leave off their madness, and dreaming of Sequestrations● and Protectorships: For the Country having been burnt, retains such a dread of those times, that nowadays not only Men, but the Brutes themselves, in my opinion, would not endure such outrages. 21. The fourth sort indeed is heterogeneous and mixed and factious, such as have been long since sunk; such as never can hold up their head again; such as partly by idleness, partly by ill managing their business; partly by bad husbandry, are tottering with old Debts: who being tired with Suits, Judgements, and Outlawries, are said to flock in great numbers, both out of Town and Country to that Camp. These men I judge not so much to be stout Soldiers, as Shifting Bafflers: Which persons, first, If they cannot stand, even let them fall; but so, that not only the State, but not so much as their next Neighbour should be sensible of it: For I do not understand the reason why if they cannot live in credit, they should desire to fall with dishonour; or why they should suppose it less pain to sink with many, than in sinking alone. 22. A fifth sort is of Parricides, Murderers, and in a word, of all Malefactors; whom I do not entice from Catiline, neither can they be torn from him; and in truth let them perish in Rebellion, being so many, that the Prison cannot hold them. 23. But the last sort is, not only in their Roll, but also in their course of life, that which is properly Catiline's, of his List; nay of his Lust and Cap: such as you see with set and ointed Hair, either Beardless, or with spruce Beards; in (i) The measure of commendable and proper habit, is such as either conduc●th to, or at least consists with readiness of Action in every one's place; therefore the Romans condemned in Men, especially Soldiers, Garments with Sleeves and Trains. Tunicks, with Sleeves, wrapped in Mantles, and not in Gowns: All the industry of whose life and labour of watching, is laid out in Revellings. In this Crew, all Gamesters, all Adulterers, all loose and debauched pe●sons do keep. These fine and soft Lads, have not only the Trade of Courting and being Courted, nor of (k) To sing, play on Instruments of Music and dance curiously, were qualisications of no credit at Rome, and looked upon as light and airy, nor suitable to the Roman gravity, but in high esteem among the Grecians. Singing and Dancing, but also of flourishing Daggers and scattering Poison; who, unless they be gone, unless they perish, though Catiline should perish, be well assured, this will be a standing Nursery of Catilines in the State. But what do those poor wretches mean? Can they carry their small Girls with them into the Camp? And how can they be without them, especially these long Cold Nights? Or in what sort can they bear the (l) A ridg● of Hills running the length of Italy North and South from the Alps to the Straight of Sicily. Apennine, and those Frosts and Snows, unless they think they shall the more easily endure the Wether, because they have practised to dance naked at Feasts? 24. A War greatly to be dreaded, when Catiline hath about him this ●ewd Lifeguard! Now, Gentlemen, draw up your Garrisons and your Armies against these precious Forces of Catiline; and first, against that broken and battered Fencer, range your Consuls and Generals; then against that naked and weather-beaten party of shipwrackt Creatures; draw forth the flower and strength of all Italy. Now the Cities of the Plantations and Boroughs shall balance Catiline's Fastnesses in the Woods: Nor in trut● ought I to compare your other Forces, Tro●phies, and Strong holds, with the want and beggary of that Rebel. 25. But if, waving all these things, whereof we have supplies, he is in want; the Senate, the Knights, the Roman People, the City, the Treasury, the Customs, all Italy, the several Provinces, Foreign Nations; I say, if waving these things, we would match the bare causes which are in dispute one with another; by that only we may apprehend how flat they are laid: For, on the one side modesty fights, on the other, scorn; on this part, Purity, on the other Debauchery; on this side Credit, on that side Knavery; on this Loyalty, on that Treason; on this side Stayedness, on the other Madness; on this side Honour, on that Baseness; on this Government, on that Lust: In sum, on this side, Equity, Temperance, Courage, Prudence; all Virtues, contend with Oppression, with Luxury, with Cowardice, with Rashness, with all Vices. Lastly, Wealth with Want, Right Reason with Absurdness, Good Judgement with Infatuation. Lastly, Fair Hope engages with the Despair of all things. In such a Combat and Battle, though the Affections of men should with draw, would not the Immortal Gods themselves oblige so many and so great Vices to be overthrown by these most Excellent Virtues. 26. Which things being so, gentlemans, do yo●, as I have before said, watch and ward your private houses: I have taken Order and provided, that the City be sufficiently guarded without putting you into any fear or Alarm. All your Planters and Burgesses, having been certified by 〈◊〉 of this Night's Excursion of Catiline, will sufficiently defend their Cities and Bounds. The Fencers, which he thought would make him a great and a sure party, although they are better affected than some of the Senators, shall yet be secured. Q. Metellus, that I upon prospect of this, sent before into the Gallican and Picenian Country, will either surprise him himself, or suppress all his motions and endeavours. But for the settling, dispatching, and ordering all other things, we will immediately move the House, which you see is summoned. 27. Now for those which have tarried behind in Town, and in truth, which have been left there by Catiline, to the destruction of it and all you; though they are enemies, yet because they are natural Citizens, I would warn them again and again. My forbearing hitherto, if it have seemed to any too slack, has waited for this, that what was hidden, might break out. For the time to come, I can forget no longer that this is my Country, that I am their Consul; that I must either live with them, or die for them. There is no Porter at the Gate, no Scout upon the Road, if any will go out, they may shift for themselves: But whoever shall stir in the Town, that I shall discover not only his acting, but any attempting, or endeavour against his Country, he shall find; that there are in the City, vigilant Consuls, there are excellent Magistrates, there is a Courageous Senate, that there are Arms and a Prison, which our Ancestors have appointed to be for the avenging of unnatural and notorious Villainies. 28. And all this shall be so carried, gentlemans, that the most important affairs with the least noise, the greatest dangers without alarm, an intestine and domestic War, the cruelest and greatest as ever was recorded, may be suppressed under my single Conduct and Generalship in the Long Robe: Which I will so manage, Gentlemen, if it be any ways possible, that not so much as any Criminal in the Town may endure the punishment due to his Treachery. But if open Rebellion, If the imminent hazard of my Country, shall force me from this temper of mind, I shall be sure to compass that other thing, which in so great and so dangerous a Rebellion, seems a boldness to wish, that no honest person may miscarry, and that by the execution of a few, ye may be all preserved. 29. Which things I promise ●ou, Gentlemen, not upon Confidence of my own Wisdom, nor the Cou●sels of Men, but upon many, and those undoubted Intimations of the Immortal Gods; by whose guidance, I have come to this hope and resolution; who now, not at a distance, as they were wont in forme● times, from a foreign and remote Enemy, but here in presence, do defend their Temples, and the Houses of the City with their power and assistance; whom you, Si●s, in duty ought to petition, worship, and implore, That what City they have pleased to raise to be most beautiful, flourishing, and powerful, they would preserve from the unnatural Treason of most desperate Citizens, all the power of Foreign Enemies being subdued both by Sea and Land. The Third ORATION Against CATILINE. The Argument. The Conspirators that were in the City, omitted no time or means to strengthen their Party, gaining all Citizens that were ill-inclined or discontented, and Strangers too: For Lentulus observing that the Allobroges, a Nation about Savoy, that now is, were deeply engaged both on public and private accounts, applies one Umbrenus, who had traded there, to their Ambassadors; promises relief of their condition, requires them to pour in a Party of gallic Cavalry to join with the Italian Infantry. They preferring certain favour before uncertain hopes, reveal the matter to Q. Fabius Sanga, Patron of their Country, he discovers it to Cicero, but is advised to put the Ambassadors to hold on fair with them, and so sound the depth of the Business, with means to discover it. They according to direction, insist for an Oath signed under their hands, to carry their State, which Lentulus, Cethegus, Statilius gav●, Cassius only promised. The Night of their departure homewards, Cicero lodges two Companies under the Captains C. Pontinius and L. Flaccus, one on either side the Pons Milvius, which way they necessarily pass, and intercepts them, their Guide Titus Vultureius, and with them a Box of Letters both to Catiline and their Senate. Then by break of day summons a Senate into the Temple of Concord. What was there done that day, b●ing the V. of December in the Evening, informs the People at the Place of Assembly. 1. YOu see, Countrymen, the State, and all your Lives, your Goods, Estates, Wives, and Children, and this Seat of the most renowned Empire, the most fortunate and beautiful City, this day by the peculiar love of the Immortal Gods towards you; by my labours, counsels, and dangers, rescued from Fire and Sword, and out of the very Jaws of destruction, and preserved and restored to you. 2. Now if those days, wherein we are delivered, are no less delightful and remarkable to us, than those whereon we are born; because the joy of our being preserved is certain, the condition whereunto we are born, uncertain; and because we are not sensible of our being born but take delight at our being preserved. In truth, since that we have extolled in love and glory Romulus, tha● founded this City (a) When Romulus was for his absolute and rough disposition in Government, torn in pieces (as some suspected) by the Senate: the same senate to allay the grief of the People and colour that Action, voted him Divine Honours: what time also Julius P●oculus a Roma● Knight, made Oath that he had appeared to him in a Shape more excellent than humane, and by him sent a certain Message to the Senate, upon which depended the future glory of that Empire. to the Immortal Gods, he, sure, that has preserved this City so founded and enlarged, shall have reason to find some esteem with you an● your posterity. For we have quenched those Brands, which were put to, well-nigh, and laid about, the Temples, Oratories, Houses, and Battlements of the whole City. We too have bearden back the Swords drawn against the State, and have warded off the points of them from your Throats. 3. All which having been in the Senate cleared, manifested, and discovered by me, I will now in short report to you, Countrymen, that you, who both are ignorant, and desirous to be informed, may know, both how great, and how plain they are; and by what course traced out and taken. First of all, since Catiline, a few days ago, broke out of the City, having left in Rome the Complices of his Treason, and the most stout Commanders of this Unnatural War, I always have been vigilant and provident, Countrymen, how we might be safe amidst so great and secret Plottings. For then, when I routed Catiline out of Town (nor do I now fear the Censure of that word, the contrary being rather to be apprehended, that he went out alive) but then, when I desired him to be banished the Verge of this Court, I either thought that the rest of the Conspirators would have gone out together, or that those who tarried behind, would be weak and disabled without him. 4. But now since I saw tha● those, who, I know, were inflamed with the greatest rage and malignancy, were amongst us, and tarried behind at Rome, I employed all my time day and night, to discover and see what they consulted and designed; that so, seeing my report could find but small credit with your Ears, by reason of the heinousness of the Treason, I might render the matter so evident, that you should then in your minds provide for your safety, when you saw with your Eyes the naked Conspiracy: Therefore, as soon as I came to know that the Ambassadors of the Allobroges had been tampered with by P. Lentulus, to raise a Transalpine War, and to put all Gauland into an uproar, and that they were sent into Gauland ● to their Countrymen, and under one, with Letters and Instructions to Catiline, and that Vulturcius wen● along in their Train and carried a Letter Express to Catiline: I thought I had an opportunity to put into my hand, that what was the hardest point, and what I always wished for from the Immortal Gods, the whole matter might be clearly discovered not only by me bu● by the Senate and yourselves. 5. Therefore yesterday, I sent for L. Flaccus and C● Pontinius Praetors, most valiant and confiding persons; I declared the whole matter, showed them my pleasure. Now they, as men of an eminent and singular affection to the State, without excuse or delay, undertook the business: and when it drew towards night, got secretly to (b) Pons Milvius a Town two Mile from Rome i● the Via Flaminia, where was a Bridge over the Tiber not unlike our Bow-Brid●e. Pons Milvi●s, and there in the adjoining Towns so divided themselves, that the Bridge and the River Tiber was between them. They carried also along with them without any suspicion many stout men, and I too had sent thither many choice youths● wearing Swords, out of the (c) Towns where Mark●ts were kept ev●ry Ninth day, and Causes heard, or Sessions and Assizes held, w●re called Prae●ecturae. Reate is a Town of the Sabines, the very Navel o● It●ly and Country of Varro. Jurisdiction of Reate; whose service I continually make use of in guiding of the State. 6. Now the Third Watch being near ended, so soon as the Ambassadors of the Allobroges, with a great Train began ●o be upon the Bridge● and Vulturcius with them, they are assailed, Swords we●e drawn both by them and by ours. The matter was known only to the Praetors, was unknown to the rest. Then at the coming in of Pontinius and Flaccus, the Fray, that was engaged in, is appeased. Whatever Letters were in that Retinue, are delivered with the Seals entire to the Praetors; the persons apprehended are brought before me about break of day: Hereupon I sent for the most dangerous Contriver of all these Plots, Cimber Gabinius, suspecting no such matter; then afterwards P. Statilius is fetched, and after him Cethegus; latest of all came Lentulus. I suppose because in making dispatches, late last night he had sat up beyond his ordinary hour. 7. Now when it was the opinion of the most eminent and honourable Men of the City, who upon hearing the matter, came early to my house in great number; That the Letters should be first opened by me, before they were moved in the House, lest, if there should be nothing in them, so great an Alarm might seem to have been rashly given the City. I said, I would not, but in a public danger, propound the matter first to the Public Council. For, Countrymen, if that had not been in them, which I was informed of, yet I did not suspect, that in so great dangers of the State, the blame of over-diligence, were to be feared by me, I suddenly called a full House, as you see. 8. And in the mean time, presently at the advice of the Allobroges, dispatched C. Sulpitius the Praetor, a stout man, to search for Arms in the House of Cethegus; from whence he brought out a great quantity of Stilettoes and Swords. I called in Vulturcius without the Gauls, and by the Order of the House passed the Public Faith to him, advising him, that without fear he wo●ld discover what he knew● thereupon he, being scarcely come to himself from a great fright, said, that he had instructions from Pub. Lentulus to Catiline, and Letters that he should use the assistance of Slaves, and bring his Army with all expedition up to the City; to that intent, that when they had fired the City in all Corners, as it was laid out and divided, and had made an infinite Massacre of the Citizens; he might be at hand to glean up them that escaped, and join his Forces with these City Commanders. 9 But the Gauls, brought in, said, They had an Oath ●nd Letters given to them by P. Lentulus, Cethegus, Statilius, to their Nation; and that such Orders were given them● by these, and by L. Cossius, they should send their Cavalry with all speed into Italy, and for Infantry they should not want. Also that Lentulus had assured them out of the Sibyls Books and the Prophecies of Soothsayers, that he is that Third Cornelius, to whom the Sovereignty and Empire of this City must come: That Silvius and Cir●na had been before him; and that he said this year was fatal for the destruction of this City and Empire, being the (d) Absolution] Marcia and Licinia were absolved by L. Metellus High Priest, with the whole College, only Aemilia condemned for Incest. 10 th', year after the Absolution of the Virgins, and (e) Bu●ning] L. Scipio and Norban●s being Consuls, the Capitol which had stood from the time of the Kings 400 years and upward, and was before the Usurpation of Silvius burnt. the twentieth since the Burning of the Capitol. They said too that there was this Controversy between Cethegus and the rest, that whereas Lentulus and the others would have the Massacre made, and the City burnt on the (f) The ●east of Saturn was the 19 th' of December, what time the whole City used to go to the Moun● Aventine, there to sacrifice and keep Festival as it were in the Country. The Chief Magistrates were therefore then to be out of Town, and much licence allowed the Apprentices and Slaves, who were for that time of misrule exempted from the commands of their Masters. Saturnalia. Cethegus thought, that was too long. 10. Now, not to be tedious, Countrymen, we commanded the Letters to be produced, which were said to have been delivered by each person respectively. The first we showed to Cethegus, he knew the Seal; we cut the thread; read it: There was written with his own hand, To the Senate and the People of the Allobroges, that he would effect, what he had assured their Ambassadors: desiring that they also, on their part would effect what their Ambassadors should direct them. Then Cethegus, who a little before had made some answer about the Swords and Daggers which were found in his House, and had said, That he was always a Lover of good Blades: Upon reading the Letters, being dismayed and confounded, through the Conviction of his Conscience, was of a sudden put to silence. Statilius was brought in, he knew both his Seal and his Hand; the Letters were read to the same purpose in a manner, as he confessed it. Then I showed Lentulus his Letter, and inquired, Whether he knew the Seal? By nod he owned it. I marry, said I, It is a Noted Seal, the Image of your Grandfather, a most Honourable Person, who bore a singular affection to his Country and Countrymen, which might of itself, though dumb, reclaim you from so great a Treason. 11. The Letter in the same tenor, to the Senate and People of the Allobroges is read, if he had any thing to say for himself in this matter, I gave him liberty. Thereupon he first denied it, but a little after, the whole Information being produced and declared, he stood up, asked the Gauls what he had to do with them, that they should come to his House? Asked Vulturcius also the like, who having answered him in short and coherently, with resolution, by whose means, and how often they came to him; and having asked him, Whether he had spoken nothing to them about the Sibyl's Books? Then he of a sudden, being for his wickedness infatuated, showed, how great the force of Conscience is. For, whereas he might safely have denied that, of a sudden, contrary to the expectation of all, he confessed it: So, not only that wit of his, and (g) P Lentulus was a Nobleman, that year one of the Eight Pretores U●bani, or Chief justices of Rom●, In speaking, his ma●ter and language however indifferent, yet the Comeliness of his Person, Gesture of his Body, full of Art and Gracefulness, a sweet and loud Voice, did wonderfully set off. practice of speaking, wherein he always had good ability, but also through the greatness of his manifest and convict Treason, that (h) That he wanted not confidenc●, may be judged by 〈…〉 for being pressed for ●aving cheated the State, he joked in the Senate, he could not give his Accounts, bu● must hold hi● Legg (as e● Boys-play, they that miss the Ball) to be s●ung a●. Legg is 〈◊〉 Surname of that Family, and given him as a Nickname. Also in a certain Trial having bribed the judges, and coming off by t●● Voices, ●e said, I here was so much money lost as the other had, when it had been enough to have come off by one Voice. impudence, wherein he surpassed all, and presumptuousness failed him. 12. But Vul●urcius of a sudden requires, that the Letters shoul● be produced and opened, which, he said, were given him by Lentulus to carry to Catiline. Thereupon Lentulus being exceedingly confounded, yet knew his Seal and Hand● Now they were written without any Name, but thus: Who I am, you shall know of this Bearer, whom I have sent Express to you; look that you play the man, and consider what pass you are come to, and see what is at the present necessary for you. Look that you take on the Aids of all, even of the meanest. Then Gabinius brought in, when as at first he began to answer peremptorily, at last denied nothing of that which the Gauls charged upon him. 13. Now as to me, Countrymen, whereas those Arguments and Proofs of the Treason seem most certain, the Letters, Seals, Hands, lastly, the Confession of every one; so did those other seem more sure, their Colour, Eyes, Looks, Silence: For they were so amazed, so fixed their Looks on the ground, so slily now and then eyed one another, that no longer by others, but they seemed to be by themselves discovered. The Proofs being produced and declared, I put the Question to the Senate, What they would resolve upon for securing the State? Most severe and courageous Votes were given by the leading Men, which the Senate followed without any dissent; and because the Order is not yet drawn up, I shall repeat to you, Countrymen, by heart what the Senate voted. 14. First of all, The Thanks of the House were given me in an ample manner, because by my courage, counsel, providence, the Commonwealth had been delivered from most imminent dangers. Then L. Flaccus and Caius Pomplinius are deservedly and justly praised; They w●●● committed not into th● public haole but confined under the custody of c●rtain Great m●n. because they had courageously and faithfully executed what I committed to their Charge. Ca Antonius a valiant man, my Colleague, has his share of praise given him too, for having removed those that were engaged in this Conspiracy from his Cabinet Council and the Secrets of ta●te. And thus they resolved, That (i) P. ●●●●tulus to P. Lentulus Spinther who was then Aedili● (an Officer a● a Mayor.) P. Lentulus having first laid down the Praetorship, should be taken into Custody: Also that (k) C. Cethegus to Q. Cornificius. C. Cethegus, (l) L. Statilius to C. Caesar. L. Statilius, and (m) P. Gabinius to M. Crassus. Only these four were then taken Publius Gabinius, who were all personally present, should be committed: (n) In case they should be taken. and the same was voted too against Lu. Cassius, who had sued for a Commission to fire the City: against (o) A Burgess of Terracina● who having inti●●tion that the Plot was discovered● attempted to fli● but● was ta●en 〈◊〉 the way and● brought trespass, h● was accordingly committed to Co. Terentius the Senator. M. C●parius, to whom as it was informed, Apulia was allotted, for drawing in the Herdsmen: against P. Furius, who is of those Plantations, that L● Silvius settled in Fesulae: against Q. Magius Chilo, who together with this F●rius, was always busy in this practising the Allobroges: against P. Umbre●us, a Freedman, by whom as it was evidenced, the Gaul● were first brought in to Gabinius. 15. And the Senate used such Gentleness, Countrymen, that, out of so great a Conspiracy, and such a power and multitude of homebred Enemies, the Commonwealth being preserved by the punishment of nine most rotten members, it is supposed the minds of the rest may be cured. And further, a Thanksgiving to the Immortal Gods for their exceeding goodness, was voted to be kept upon my account; which has never been done before to any in the Long Robe since the Foundation of the City, but to me: and it was drawn up in these words, Because I had delivered the City from firing, the Citizens from slaughter, and Italy from war. Which Thanksgiving if it be compared with others, Countrymen, this difference may be sound, that others have been appointed for serving, mine for the preserving of the State. And that which was in the fi●st place to be done, is passed and performed. For P. Lentulus, although discovered by his Proofs and Confessions, had been by the Judgement of the Senate (p) The form of his degrading from the Chief justiceship was such, that he was disrobed of his Scarlet Gown in the Senat●, and put on Mourning Weeds suitabl● to his condition, as being a Criminal under Trial. degraded not only from the Dignity of Praetor, but from the liberty of a Citizen, yet did lay down his Magistracy; that, what C. Marius, that excellent person never scrupled at for the kill of C. Glaucia, the Praetor, against whom there was no Vote passed by name, we might be delivered of that scruple, in executing Lentulus a private man. 16. Now, seeing, Countrymen, you have the unnatural Generals of this most wicked and dangerous Rebellion, in hold and prison, ye ought to judge, that all the forces of Catiline, all his hopes and strength, these dangers of the City being prevented, are fallen to the ground: whom indeed when I turned out of Town, I foresaw this in my mind, Countrymen, that if Catiline were got out of the way, I had no reason to fear, either the drowsiness of P. Lentulus, or the fat guts of L. Cassius, nor the hotheaded rashness of Ca C●thegus. He was the only person of them all to be feared, but so long as he continued within the Town, he had intelligence of every thing; he had access to every body: He had ability, had confidence, to break the question to them, to feel them, to practise them: He had a Head shaped for any Exploit; and to that Head, was wanting neither Tongue nor Hand. Now for the execution of his other business, he had certain choice and suitable Instruments: Nor yet, as soon as he had given a thing in Charge, did he reckon his work done; there was nothing but he overlooked himself, compassed in good time, watched and drudged for; could bear Cold, Thirst, Hunger. 17. This person, so eager, so forward, so audacious, so subtle, so watchful at his Treason, so active in mischief, had I not driven from his secret Ambushes in Town, to open action in the Field (to tell you, Countrymen, what I think) I had not easily prevented this great mischief from falling upon your Necks. He would not have pitched you the Saturnales, nor so long before have given out the fatal day for the destruction of the State, neither would he have been so far overseen, as that his Seal, his Letters, no, not that any witnesses of such open Treason should be produced. All which, now in his absence, have been so carried, that never was theft in any private house so openly detected, as this so great Conspiracy in the State has been found and convicted. But if Catiline had tarried in Town to this day, although as long as he was here, I obviated and prevented his designs, yet, to speak with the lowest, we must have fought with him, nor could we ever, as long as that Enemy had been in Town, with so great peace, such quiet, such silence, have freed the State from so great dangers. 18. Although all these things, Countrymen, I have so managed, that they may be perceived to have been fore-seen and carried on by the Council and Guidance of the Immortal Gods. Which, as we may conjecture, because the conduct of such weighty affairs may hardly be judged within the compass of humane policies, so indeed in such present manner of late have they aided and assisted us, that we might almost see them with our Eyes: For, to wave those things, Meteors like Torches in the West, seen by night, and the Heavens as it were all on fire; to pass by Lightnings, Earthquakes, and the other Prodigies, which have happened in our Consulship, so many, that the Immortal Gods seem with a Voice from Heaven to have proclaimed the things which are now come to pass. This one thing, Countrymen, which I shall mention, must neither be omitted, nor neglected. 19 For ye must needs remember, when Cotta and Torquatus were Consuls, that many Turrets in the Capitol were struck with Lightning, what time also the Images of the Immortal Gods were beaten down, and the Statues of Ancient Men overthrown, and (q) As w● engross our Acts of Parliament and ●ile the Originals up in the Records; so the ancient Roma●s when their Law had been the third Market-day approved by the People, engraved it in Brass Tables and laid it up in th● Treasury. The XII. Tables so engraved, were laid up in the Tower. the Brass Tables of the Law melted; Romulus too, that founded this City, was smitten, whom, you remember to have been gilded in the Capitol, a Babe, and sucking with the Wolves Teats in his Mouth. At what time, the Diviners, having been convented from all Etruria said, That Slaughters and Fires, and the abolition of the Laws, and Civil and Domestic Wars, and ruin of the whole City and Empire did approach; unless the Immortal Gods, attoned by all means, should by their absolute power almost alter the course of Fate. 20. Therefore upon their Interpretations at that time, both Plays were for ten days celebrated, and nothing omitted, which might tend towards the atonement of the Gods. The same Soothsayers too gave order, To make a larger Image of Jupiter, and to place it on high, and turn it East, contrary to what it had been before; and said, They had hopes, if that Image, which you see, looked towards the East, and the judgement-hall and the Senate-House, it would come to pass, that those designs, which were secretly plotted against the safety of the City and Empire, should be brought to light; so that they might be clearly seen by the Senate and People of Rome. Now those Consuls agreed with Workmen to have it erected in that posture; but the slowness of the Work was such, that it was neither set up by the former Consuls, nor by us till this very day. 21. Here, who can be so destitute of Truth, so obstinate, so senseless, as to deny this whole visible World, and especially this City, to be ruled by the providence and power of the Immortal Gods? For whereas such Interpretation was given, that Slaughters, Fires, and Subversion of the State, were in contriving, and that by lewd Citizens; which at that time for the heinousness of the Crimes, seemed to some incredible: You have found those things, not only designed, but also attempted by unnatural Citizens. And is not that so plain a thing, that it may seem to have come to pass by the Guidance of the good and great jupiter, that when as to day morning, both the Conspirators and the Informers against them, were by my order carried into the Temple of Concord, at that very time the Image was setting up? Which being placed, and turned towards you and the Senate, both the Senate and you have seen what things were contrived against the safety of every one, to be all brought to light and manifested. 22. So much the more hatred and punishment were they worthy of, who have endeavoured to wrap in a deadly and unnatural Flame, not only your Seats and Houses, but also the Temples and Oratories of the Immortal Gods; whom, if I should say that I resisted, I should take too much upon me, and were intolerable. It was that, that jupiter that resisted them. He was pleased to preserve the Capitol; he, to preserve these Temples; he, this City; he, all of you. By the guidance of the Immortal Gods, I received these impressions and impulses, and attained to these so evident proofs. Now this practising of the Allobroges, a business of such importance, would never truly have been so sottishly trusted by Lentulus, and the other homebred Enemies, both to Strangers and to Barbarians; nor Letters committed, unless by the judgement of the Immortal Gods so desperate an attempt had been deprived of ordinary prudence; nay, that Gauls being of a State hardly well-reduced, which is the only Nation left, that seems both able and not unwilling to make War with the Roman People, should yet neglect the hope of Empire and of great advantages, freely offered them by Patricians, and should prefer your safety before their own power: Do you not think that this came from God? especially when they might have overcome us, not by fight, but by holding their peace? 23 Therefore, Countrymen, seeing that a Thanksgiving is voted before all the Images, solemnize those days with your Wives and Children. For many honours have been justly and of due given to the Immortal Gods, but in truth none ever more justly: For being rescued from most cruel and miserable destruction, rescued without slaughter, without blood, without Army, without fight, in your Gowns, I being your Commander and General in the Long Robe, ye have gotten the Victory. 24. Now call to mind, Countrymen, all Civil Dissensions, not those only, which ye have heard of, but these also, which yourselves do remember and have seen: L. Silvius suppressed (r) P. Sulpitius a Tribune of the Commons, would hav● got certain Laws passed; the Consuls oppose; he wi●h the favour of Marius fal●s upon them and kills the Son of Q. Pompey, who w●s Son in Law of Silvius t●e other Consul; Silvius brings up his Army ●o Town, overthrows the Tribunes, and exc●p●s from pardon for Life or Estate, 12 men, whereof P. Sulpi●i●s is taken and slain; but Marius by ship got over to Africa, C. Marius is called the Preserver of Rome, because he overthrew two powerful and victorious Armies of the Gauls pressing into Italy, the one at Ambrun, the other at Aix l● Chappelle. P. Sulpitius; he banished C. Marius, the Preserver of this City, and many valiant men, he partly banished, partly slew. (s) C. Cornelius Cinna would have got certain Laws passed when L. Silvius was abroad; Cn. Octavius the other Consul forced him away by the overthrow of his party in Town, degraded him from the Consulship, and proclaimed him a Rebel and Traitor. Cn. Octavivius being Consul, chased out his Colleague from the Town by force of Arms. All this place was covered with heaps of Corpses and the blood of Citizens. Afterwards (t) Cinna afterwards gathered forces in Italy, and Marius coming over joins with him; as also Sertorius and Cn. Ca●ho, they march up in four Bodies and take Rome. Cinna and Marius prevailed. But then (u) Cn. Octavius the Consul, Q. Catulus, ●. Merula the Priest of● Jupiter, M Antony and C. Caesar two most eminent Orators, Crassus the Father and Son, and other Noblemen of the adverse party without number were slain; the S●nate met him; as he passed by them with a Band of Slaves at his heels, whomsoever he did not reach out his hands to salut● them, the Slaves presently slew. the most eminent men being slain, the eyes of the City were put out; afterwards (x) Silvius upon the ●ews of this pieces up a Peace with Mithridates and brings home his Army into Italy, overthrows his adversaries, but then h● filled the City and all Italy with slaughter, killed 90 Senators, of which 1● were Consular men; 2600 Knights, 70000 Roman Citizens in cold blood, over and above innumerable slain in Battle. Silvius avenged the cruelty of this Victory; with how great diminution of the Citizens and calamity of the State (y) Either b●cause it w●● fresh in memory, or for the atrocity of the fact. it need not be mentioned. (z) M. Lepidus about the funeral and disannulling the Acts of Silvius, Q. Ca●ulus (Son of Q. Catulus ●bove) said to be slain by Cinna, when their Consulship was ended, they sought it out in the Campus Martius, where Lepidus being beaten, ●●ed into Sardinia, and there died a natural death. M. Lepidus dissented from Quintus Catulus, a most gallant and valiant man, not so much his own destruction brought sorrow to the Commonwealth as that of others. 25. And these dissensions were of this nature, Countrymen, as ●ended not to the abolition, but the change of Government. These men did not desire the State should be confounded, but that themselves should be the principals in such as was. Nor would they have the City burnt, but themselves to flourish in it● yet all these dissensions, whereof none desired the destruction of the State, were such, as they were decided, not by an accommodation of parties, but by the Carnage of Citizens. But in this War, the greatest and cruelest of any recorded; such a War as never any Barbarians waged with their own Nation: in which War, this Condition was resolved upon by Lentulus, Catilin●, Cassius, Cethegus: That all they, who could save themselves in saving the City, should have no Quarter given; I have so behaved myself, Countrymen, that all of you are preserved in safety. And when as your Enemies had reckoned, that so many Citizens should survive as were the remainder of a boundless Massacre; and so much of the City should stand, as the flame could not take in, I have preserved both City and Citizens safe and sound. 26. For which so great actions, Countrymen, I require from you no (a) Preferment. Reward of Virtue, nor (b) Triumph. Badge of Honour, nor (c) Statue. M. Cato the Elder said● I had rather men shoul● inquire why has Cato no Image? than why hath h● one? And Agesilaus the L●cedemonia● General when the Greeks in sia had ordered him Stat●es to b● se● up in their most famous Cities, wrote to them to this purpose, Let there be no Picture nor Molten or Graven Image of me; and dying, requested the like ●f his Friends; for if, saith he, I have done any worthy Action, that will of itself be my Monument: but if not, all Statues that can be made, can be no Monument to me. Alike moderation of spirit Tully preserved, when having been Proconsul or Lieutenant of Asia, and governed in that Charge with great integrity, would yet admit only verbal acknowledgements, but continued to refuse erecting Statues to him. Monument of praise besides the everlasting memory of this day. I would have deposited and erected in your Bosoms, all my Triumphs, all Ornaments of Honour, Monuments of Glory, Badges of Praise. No dumb thing can take with me, nothing silent; in a word, nothing of that nature, which men of not any great merit may attain. In your memory, Countrymen, shall our Actions be cherished, in your discourses shall they grow up, in the Records of History shall they come to age and full strength; and I judge, that the same length of time, which I hope will be parallel to Eternity, is propagated both to the preservation of this City, and to the memory of my Consulship; and that at one time in this State were (d) Pompey and Caesar. two Citizens; the one whereof has bounded the extent of your Empire, no● by the Terrestrial but the Celestial Regions; the other preserved the Mansion and Seat of the same Empire. 27. But because there is not a like fortune and condition of the things which I have acted, as of those, who have waged foreign wars; because I must live with them I have vanquished and subdued; they have left their Enemies, either slain, or brought into bondage. It is your part, Countrymen; to provide, if others good actions advantage them, that mine may not come to prejudice me. For, that the treacherous and unnatural intentions of audacious men, might not hurt you, I have provided: that they may not hurt me, it is your part to provide. Although Countrymen, myself cannot be hurt by them; for there is great protection in the good Party, which is gained to me for ever: Great dignity in the State, which will always silently defend me; there is a great awe of Conscience, which whosoever shall slight, when they go about to hurt me, will betray themselves. 28. There is further in us such resolution, Countrymen, that we are so far from giving way to the boldness of any, as we do always voluntarily defy all Traitors. Now if all the assaults of the homebred Enemies diverted from you, should return upon my single person● you, Countrymen, must look to it: In what condition you would have them hereafter stand, who shall interpose themselves to Envy and all dangers for your preservation. For myself, what is there more, that can be acquired to the content of life, especially since I see no higher step, ●hat I care to ascend either in Place of Honour from you, or in Praise of Virtue. 29. This, Countrymen, in truth I will effect; what I have managed in my Consulship, when I am come to be a private man, to maintain and improve. That if any Envy for preserving the State, has been incurred, it may turn to their hurt only that ●ear it, but to my glory. In sum, I will so deport myself in the State, always to remember what I have acted, and give diligence, that it may appear, to have been managed by virtue and no●●or●une. You, Countrymen, seeing it is now Night, go pray to that Jupiter, the Guardian of this City and yourselves, and go away to your Houses, and though the danger be now over, yet watch and ward them as ye did the Night before; that ye may not long be put to that trouble, but continue in peace without interruption, I shall provide. The Fourth ORATION Against CATILINE. The Argument. The Conspiracy being thus fully discovered, a Senate is called on the VI of December, with Order that a Reward be bestowed on the Ambassadors of the Allobroges and Titus Vulturcius, for giving Information of the Plot, and in the Night to avoid a Tumult of the People, the Prisoners were conveyed into the Common Gaol; but L●ntulus by divers of his Liberti and Clients, spread into several Quarters, assayed to hire Workmen and Shopkeepers to rise and rescue him. So Cethegus animated his Fencers and stout men that were in his Crew, to make their way in to him with their Weapons. Upon notice of which Tully calls the Senate again on the VII. and puts it to the Question what the House please should be done with the Prisoner's? Where finding them divided, and some out of tenderness to him, inclinable to a less severe Censure, he persuadeth them to be unanimous, and before Night pass their Sentence with diligence and courage. 1. I See, my Lords, all your faces and eyes turned towards me, I see you solicitous, not only for your own and the Commonwealths danger, but, (although that be prevented) for mine also. Your affection to me in this perplexity, I take kindly, and thankfully, amidst my grief● but I beseech you, for the Immortal God's sake, lay that aside, and forgetting my safety, think upon yourselves and your own Children. For my part, if this have been made the Condition of my Consulship, that I must undergo all extremities, all pains and torments, I shall endure them, not only courageously, but even contentedly, so that by my pangs, deliverance and honour may be brought forth to you and the Roman People. 2. I am that Consul, my Lords, who have never found the Pleading Hall, wherein all Equity is preserved, nor the Camp consecrated to the Election of Consuls: nor the Senate, the supreme relief of all Nations, nor my own House, the Common Refuge; nor Bed, ordained for repose; nor lastly, this Seat of Honour, the Ivory Chair, free from the danger of my Life and Plots. I have concealed much, endured much, yielded much, have with some regret of my own in your fears, healed much. Now if the Immortal Gods are pleased to have this the issue of my Consulship, that I should rescue you, my Lords, and the Roman People from a miserable Massacre, your Wives and Children and the Vestal Virgins, from most violent haling; their Temples and Oratories, and this the most noble Country of every one of us, from a most execrable flame; all Italy from war and desolation; whatever fortune shall be proposed to my single person, let it fall. For if P. Lentulus, seduced by Fortune-tellers, has thought his Name should be fatal to the destruction of the State; why should not I rejoice, that my Consulship has been almost fatal to the preservation of the Commonwealth. 3. Wherefore, my Lords, look to your own interest, provide for your Country, preserve your Wives, Children, and Estates; defend the Name and safety of the Roman People; forbear your tenderness for me, and to be anxious on my behalf. For first, I have grounds to hope, that all the Gods, that are Tutela● to the City, will render unto me according to my desert. Then, if any thing should fall out amiss, I shall be contented and ready to die: For Death can never come dishonourable to a Valiant Person, nor untimely to him that is Consular, nor unfortunate to a Wise man. Neither yet am I so obdurate as not to be moved with the affliction of my most dear and loving (a) Q. Cicero. Brother here present, and with the tears of all these you see me surrounded with. Nor, but that (b) Terrentia. my Wife dismayed, my c Tullia. Daughter distracted with fear, and the little Babe (d) M. Tullius the younger. my Son, whom the Commonwealth seems to hug as the Hostage of my Consulship, do often call my thoughts home; nor am I unconcerned for my (e) Crassipes was the first husband of Tullia, after, she married Dolabella (here present) and last of all 〈◊〉. Piso. Here is to be noted the decorum which was observed, that his Brother and Son-in-Law wore at several distances present, to move compassion, the Women and little Child kept at home. Son in Law● who stands here in my sight, waiting for the issue of this day. I am moved at all these things, but to that side, that they may be all preserved with you; although any violence should overwhelm me, rather than that they and we should be involved in the universal ruin of the State. 4. Wherefore (my Lords) apply yourselves to the preservation of the Commonwealth, look well about for the Storms, that hang over you, unless you provide against them. It is not a Tib. Gracchus, that would the second time be made Tribune of the Commons, not G. Gracchus, that endeavoured to stir up men to the Claims of Public Lands; not ●. Saturninus, that slew C. Memmius is called in question, and brought to the Trial of your Severity: But those are in hold, who tarried at Rome for the burning of the City, the massacring of all of you, and letting in of Catiline. Their Letters, Seals, Hands, are produced, in a word, every one's Confession; the Allobroges are practised, Slaves raised, Catiline invited: such a Plot was laid, that all should be cut off, and none left, no not so much as to deplore the Name of the People of Rome, and lament the Calamity of so great an Empire. 5. All this Informers have declared, the Criminals have confessed, yourselves have by many Verdicts already prejudged: first, in that ye gave me thanks in singular terms, and did declare that by my virtue and diligence the Conspiracy of desperate men was discovered. Then in that ye obliged P. Lentulus to lay down the Praetorship. Then that you voted both him and the others, on whom you passed Sentence to be committed; and especially in that you ordered a Thanksgiving in my behalf; which honour has not been given to any in the Long Robe before me. Lastly, In ●hat yesterday, you gave most large Rewards to the Ambassadors of the Allobroges and Titus Vulturcius. All which things are of that nature, that those who have been put in prison by name, may, without any Controversy appear to have been condemned by you. 6. But I have resolved to move the Question anew to you, both concerning the fact, what you judge of it, and concerning the punishment, what you resolve upon? yet I will only premise what belongs to my place as Consul. I long since saw a great malignancy working in the State, and certain new mischiefs brewing and stirring: but that, so great, so deadly a Conspiracy as this was made by Citizens', I never dreamt. Now whatever it be to which your minds and resolutions bend, you must determine it before night. How great a Treason has been discovered, you see. If you think but few to be accessary to it, you are greatly mistaken. The mischief is spread farther than you imagine. It is diffused not only over all Italy, but has passed beyond the Alps, and creeping secretly, has already seized many Provinces. It can by no means be crushed by forbearing and delaying; whatever way you think ●it, it must suddenly be punished. 7. I see as yet but two Votes, the one of D. Silanus, who resolves, that, They which endeavoured to destroy these things, should be punished with death. The other o● C. Caesar, (a) In 〈◊〉 Roman D●mocracy felonies and Mu●ders ●er● not punishable by Death nor ●o●fe●ture of Estate, but the Party convict was banished and lost his Freedom, which wa● all that they employed in the common acceptance of what the● te●med a Capital Offence or Punishment. Th● instanced of those that under colour of High Treason were put to death, have been in all the Ages of that State but rare a●d numerable; such as seem to have much of violence upon jealousies of a prevailing party; for aught appears in History no● v●ry 〈◊〉 grounded, rather than any crimes du●y proved, ●s suspicions of desiring th● A●●●r●tion of St●te or affectation of usurping a Kingly Power, upon an interpretation of some Actio●● that might alike flow from men of Public Spirits, but otherwise the Privilege or ind●ed Prerogative of the Citizen and Fre●man of Rome● was no● grown almost un●ounded. The Valerian, th● Porcian, the Sempronian Law● ha● so fenced the Persons of that Imperial People from suffering, and wer● so largely interpreted in their favour by Popular Governors, that it was made a Question, 〈◊〉 h●re, whethe● D●●th o●●n● other Corporal Punishment, might in any case be inflicted by ●he Magistrate upon a Roman Citizens' T●e Negative of which Caesar maintains. To which absurdity the Government of a Fr●e Stat● naturally reduces itself; for wher● the Majesty is in ●ll, ther● the P●rsons of all ar●●acr●d, and thi● is ●ota liberton, or the very dissolution of Government, and alike demonstrates the Perfection of Monarchy, where Law ha●● the largest extent and Authority the high●st sanction. who excludes the penalties of death, but takes in all Extremities of other punishments. The one and the other both according to his dignity and the Atrocity of the Fact deals with the highest severity. The one judges, That, They who endeavoured to deprive us all, and the Roman People of life, to ra●e the Empire, to extinguish the name of the Roman People, ought not one moment to enjoy li●e and this air we breathe in● And quotes Precedents that this sort of punishment has been often used against seditious Citizens in this State. The other is of this judgement, That, Death was never appointed by the Immortal Gods for a punishment, but either a natural necessity or rest from labours and miseries; therefore that Wisemen n●ver unwillingly and Valiant Men have often cheerfully embraced death: but that Bonds, and those everlasting, have in truth been invented for the singular punishment of unnatural wickedness. Hereupon he order, that, They should be imprisoned in the several Burroughs. This thing, if you command it, seems to carry oppression with it; difficulty, if you require it; yet let it pass, if it be your will and pleasure. For I shall promise, and I hope prove the man that does not th●nk it suitable to his Office, to dispute that which you shall determine for the public good. 〈…〉 in Hell, because it seems they were of judgement, That if those were removed, death itself were not to be dreaded. 9 Now, my Lords, I see, what it makes for my interest, if you shall follow Caesar's Vote; seeing he has stood that cou●se which is counted popular in the State, perchance I shall have less reason to dread the insults of the People; he being the Author and Persuader of this Resolution. If you shall choose the other, I do not know, whether I shall have any further trouble at all. But yet let the advantage of the State prevail over the Considerations of my private dangers. For we have from C. Caesar as his own dignity and the honour of his Ancestors required, this his Vote as an Hostage of his perpetual good affection to the State. It is to be discerned; what difference there is, between the vanity of Demagogues and a mind truly popular, seeking the safety of the People. 10. I see some body of those that would be counted popular, absent, that they may not pass Sentence on Roman Citizens in good time. The same person both the other day committed Cethegus and P. Lentulus Roman Citizens, to prison, and voted a Thanksgiving for me, and yesterday highly rewarded the Informers. Now, none can question what he, who has voted imprisonment to the Malefactor, thanks to the Judge, reward to the Informer, judges concerning the whole case and business. But now C. Caesar conceives, The Sempronian Act was made concerning Roman Citizens, whereas he, that is an Enemy to the State, can by no means be a Citizen. In a word, thate The very Maker of the Sempronian Act, by Order of the People was executed for his Treason. He too, does not think, that, Lentulus the Prodigal, an● the great Corrupter of the People● having so bitterly and cruelly plotte● th● subversion of the State● an● the destruction of the City, can be called popular. Therefore like ● soft and good natured man, h● sticks not to commit P. Lentulus to everlasting Chains and darkness ● and enacts for the future, That no one, may vaunt himself in the release ●f his punishment, and com● to be popular to the ruin of the State ● He further adds, The Confiscation of their Goods, that the want a●● beggary of the body may follow 〈◊〉 the torments of the Soul. 11. Wherefore, whether you shall conclude upon this, you will furnish ●e with a Companion to the Assembly, that is beloved and ●aking with the Roman People, or, if you shall follow that other Vote of Silanus, you will easily justify me and yourselves from any aspersion of Cruelty, and I shall have it granted that that was far the gentler Cause. Although, my Lords, what Cruelty can there be in punishing the Inhumanity of so great Treason. Now I judge as I am sensible of the nature of the fact; for so may you and I long enjoy the quiet of the State, as my earnestness in this case does not proceed from any bitterness of spirit: (for who can be milder than I?) but from a king of singular tenderness and compassion● For me thinks I see this City, the light of the whole world, and the Citadel of all Nations of a sudden sinking in one Conflagration: I see in my mind my Country buried, heaps of Citizens, miserable and unburied, the Look of Cethegus, and his rage swaggering in your slaughter passes before my eyes. 12. But when I consider Lentulus, upon the Throne, as himself confessed, that he expected by Prophecies, this Gabinius his Courtier clad in Purple, Catilin● come with his Army; then ● dread the shrieks of honest Women, and the ●light of Virgins and Boys, and the haling of Vestal Priestesses; now because these things seem to me miserable an● pitiful in the Excess; therefore I show myself severe and earnes● against those, who designed to accomplish them. For I put the case, if any Master of a Family having had his Children dashed i● pieces by his Servant, his Wife killed, and his House burnt should no● inflict a most sore punishment upon the Slave, were he to be thought gentle and merciful or a most inhuman and cruel creature? In truth I should think him hard-hearted and senseless that should not ease his own grief and torment with the grief and torment of the Malefactor's So we towards those men, which would murder us, ou● Wives, and our Children, who endeavoured to raze the particular House of every one of us, and this General Seat of the E●pir●, who attempted to place the Nation of the Allobroges in the ruins of this City, and in the ashes of the Consumed Empire. If we shall be most eager, we shall be accounted merciful if we shall be slack, we must undergo the infamy of the greatest Cruel●y● in the destruction of our Country and Countrymen. 13. Unless perchance, (f) L. ●●●sar be●or● 〈◊〉 gave his Vote against Len●ul●s● made a Preface to excuse his Alliance, and show h● was not unsensible of his Sister's calamity, though bound in duty to tender the public safety. L. Caesar, a most valiant and well-affected Patriot might be thought the other day by any one somewhat cruel; when ●e said his Brother in Law, the Husband of his own (g) Julia the Aunt of C. Caesar and Relict of M. An●o●ius Criticus, the son of M. Antony the Orator and father of M. Antony the Triumvir, afterwards married P. Lentulus● Plutarch notes that the execution of him was th● ground of that deep g●udge which was in M● Antony ever after, and at last cost ●ully his life. Sister, a most virtuous Lady, when he was there present and in hearing, must be put to death; when he further said, that, His Grandfather was slain by the Order of the Consul, and his young So● Ambassador from the Father, executed in the Prison; whose action how far short came it of this? What Plot was there laid to confound the Commonwealth? (h) C. G●acchus his Laws were to give the Soldier's clothes over and above Pay, to distribute ●●rn amongst th● Poor by ricketss constantly, to divide Lands of Conquest by way of Plantations. To give the Italians equal Voices with the Romans in choice of Magistrates, to appoint an equal num●er of Knights to be judges, as was before of Senators only. To make● it punishable if any Magistrate should put a Roman Citizen to death uncondemned, that is, without a particular Order from the general Assembly of the People● and a seventh to limit the Age of being pressed to the Wars to 17 years and upward. A corrupt humour of profuseness was then stirring in the State, and a kind of stickling for parties. Now at that time the Grandfather of this Lentulus, an honourable person, in Arms pursued Gracchus, and then received in his Body a sore hurt, that the Majesty of the State might in no point receive abatement. This here present to subvert the foundations of the State, called in the Gauls, raised the Slaves, invited Catiline, allotted us to be assassinated by Cethegus, the other Citizens to be murdered by Gabinius, the City to be set a fire by Cassius, all Italy to be laid waist and plundered by Catiline. You may be timorous, I warrant you, lest in so barbarous and unnatural a Treason you may be thought to have passed too severe a Sentence, when ye ought much rather to dread least by remissness of punishment you should be rather judged cruel to your Country, than by severity of Execution, too vigorous towards its most bitter Enemies. 14. But, my Lords, I cannot conceal, what I hear boldly spoken; for words are given out, which are come to my ears, of some as would seem to fear my having strength enough to put in execution what you shall this day enact. All things are provided, ready, and concluded upon, my Lords, both by my great care and diligence, as also by the far greater forwardness of the Roman People to retain their Empire, and preserve their common ●●rt●nes: All men of all ranks, nay of all ages are here: The Marketplace is full; all the Avenues of this House and Temple are full: For since the foundation of the City, this is the only case has arrived, wherein all persons are of one and the same mind, excepting those who seeing themselves must perish, choose rather to pull down all than to fall alone. 15. These men I am willing to exclude and separate; for neither do I reckon them in the number of bad Citizens, but of most desperate Enemies. But the rest now (Immortal Gods!) with what concourse, with what earnestness, with what courage, do they conspire to the common honour and safety? (i) There had been a long contest from the times of the Gracchis between the Senate and Knights about being judges. The Sempronian Law admitted the Knights, this continued some 50 years, L Silvius settled it on the Senators only. These proved very corrupt; afterwards the Aurelian Law made by Aur. Cotta, divided the power equally between the Senators, the Knights, and the Commissioners of the Treasury at Wars. What do I mention here the Roman Knights, that so render to you in supremacy of Order and Counsel, as that in good affections to their Country, they contend with you; whom after many years' dissension this day and this Cause joins to us, having reduced them to an agreement and unity with our Order, which Conjunction consummated in my Consulship, if we shall hold steadily in the Commonwealth I assure you, no civil and homebred mischief shall hereafter accrue to any part of the State. I see the Commissioners of the Treasury, most courageous persons; and also all the Clerks have flocked hither with the like affection to defend the State, whom this day having casually drawn to the Treasury, I see to be turned from attendance upon their Lot to the Common Safety. All the multitude of Freemen assists, even of the meanest. 16. For who is there, to whom these Temples● the very face of the City, possession of Liberty, in a word, this very light, and this common ground of his Country, is not both dear and also sweet and delightful? It is worth the while, my Lords, to observe the Factions of the Freedmen, who having by their industry purchased the fort●ne of the City, judge this in truth to be their own Country. Whereas (k) T●e Senator's were omitted in the beginning of this Enumeration, as being there present, to and before whom h● spoke, and so unnecessary to be mentioned. Yet the Fact on that secretly f●vor●● ●●tiline, was so great in the House, that he sorely taxes them, though obliquely, in this passage. some bo●● here, and born in the highest rank, have not judged it their Country, but an Enemy's City. But why do I mention men of this rank, whom their private fortunes, whom the Common State, whom, lastly, that liberty, which is most sweet, has raised to defend the safety of their Country? There is no Slave, that is but in a tolerable condition of service, but dreads, but desires to withstand the audaciousness of desperate Citizens, but contributes as much as he dares, and as much as he can, to the common endeavour after safety. 17. Wherefore, if what hath been said, do chance to weigh with any of you, that a certain Pimp of Lentulus', bustles about the Shops, hoping that the minds of indigent and simple men may be wrought upon with money; such a thing indeed was set on foot, and attempted; but there were none found so much either in fortune miserable, or in Principles debauched, but desired that very (l) Tradesmen and Shopkeepers. place of his Stall and work and daily earnings, (m) journeymen and Labourers. but his bare lodging and bed; (n) Loy●ter●●s and Beggars. nay, but the very idle course of their life, to be in safety: yea far the greatest part of Shopkeepers, or in truth (for it should rather be so said) that whole Rank is very fond of peace; for all their Tools, all their day-labour and gain is supported by the populousness of the Towns, and cherished by peace; whose gain, if it be impaired at the Shutting up of their Shops, what would become of it, at the burning of them? 18. Which things being so, my Lords, you do not want the Guards of the Roman People, look to it, that ye be not thought wanting to the People of Rome. You have a Consul reserved from many dangers and plots, and from the midst of death; not for his own life, but for your safety: All ●anks do conspire in mind, affection, endeavour, courage and voice, to preserve the State: The common Country, beset with Firebrands, and the Weapons of the unnatural Conspiracy, humbly holds forth her hand to you: To you comments herself, to you the life of all her Citizens, to you the Tower and Capitol, to you the Altars of the Household Gods, to you the continual and everlasting Fire of (o) There was no Image of Vesta, but a fire burning constantly on the Altar, and kept by Virgins. A Custom that s●ems to have been derived from the Chaldaeans, ●ho worship's Fire. Vesta; to you all the Temples and Oratories of the Gods; to you the Battlements and Houses of the City. Besides, this day you must pass judgement upon your own Lives, the Breath of your Wives and Children, the Fortunes of all, your Houses and Healths. 11. You have a Leader, regarding you, forgetting himself, an opportunity not always given. You have all Ranks, all Men, ●ll the Roman People, which in a Civil Case we now first behold in one and the same mind. Consider, how one Night has almost confounded an Empire, founded with what Labours? A liberty established upon what Valour? Fortunes improved and raised, by what bounty of the Gods? That such a thing may never hereafter be not only effected, but contrived; you must this day provide. Nor have I spoken all this to press you, who in your affections do almost outrun me: but that my voice, which ought to be leading in the Government, may appear to have discharged the duty of a Consul. 20. Now before I come home to my Vote, I'll premise a word concerning my sel●. I see that I have drawn upon myself so great a multitude of Enemies as is the Party of the Conspirators, which you perceive to be very great; but I judge to be base and weak, contemptible and lost. But if in any time to come that Party, headed by the fury and treachery of any person, shall come to be more prevalent than your Honour and that of the State; yet I shall never repent, my Lords, of my Actions and Counsels: For Death, with which perchance they menace m●, is appointed for all; but so great a praise of life, as you by your Acts have honoured me with, no one has attained to: For, ye have voted to all others always Thanks for having well-served; but to me alone, for having preserved the State. 21. Let that Scipio be renowned, by whose Conduct and Valour Hannibal was obliged to face about into Africa and quit Italy ● Let the other Africanus be adorned with excellent praise, who razed two Cities most incensed against this Empire, Carthage and Numantia: Let Lu. Pa●lu● be accounted an extraordinary person, whose Chariot, the once most puissant and noble King Perses honoured: Let M●rius be in eternal renown, who freed Italy ●rom Siege and the fear of Bondage: Let Pompey be advanced beyond them all, whose actions and gallantries are contained in ●he ●ame Country's and Bounds, as the course of the Sun. There will be in truth amidst the praises of these persons, some room for our Glory; unless perchance it (p) A plain Allusion to the Compliment that Pompey put upon Cicero coming to congratulate him at his return from the overthrow of Mithridates; when in the hearing of many he said he should have lost his labour in bringing up ● Third Triumph, had not Tully obliged the State by preserving a place wherein he might Triumph; for it might be supposed that ●h●s: ●rati●n was finished afterwards, when published by Tully. be more to open us Provinces, whither we may escape; than to look that they that are absent, may have a place, whither they may return victorious. 22. Although in one point the Condition of a Foreign Victory is better than that o● a Domestical one; because Outlandish Enemies either are subdued and brought into bondage, or reconciled, and judge themselves obliged by that favour. But they which from the Rank of Citizens, depraved by some false Principle, are on●e turned Enemies to their Country, when you have put ●hem by their mischievous intentions, you can neither by Force restrain, nor by any kindness reconcile: Wherefore I see I have entered into an implacable quarrel with revol●ed Citizens, which yet I have good confidence may be by your and all honest men's assistance, and thorough the memory of those grea● dangers, which shall always stick not only in this people, which has been preserved, but also in the discourses and minds of all Nations, fairly beaten off from me and mine. Nor indeed shall there ever be found any so great power which can infringe and shake the Union that is between you and the Roman Knights, and such an harmony of all ●he well-affected. 23. Which things being so, my Lords, instead of a Generalship of an Army, of a Government, which I have neglected; Instead of a Triumph and other Badges of Pra●se, which have been slighted by me, in rega●d of the Cities and your preservation: Instead of Clients and Provincial Friendships, which yet with my Estate in Town, I do with no less labour support than purchase: Instead therefore of all these things, and in reward of my singular affections towards you, and for this diligence, which ye behold in preserving the State, I require nothing more of you, but the remembrance of this time and my whole Consulship, which, while it shall continue fixed in your minds, I shall judge myself encircled with a most impenetrable wall. But if the (p) Two ye●rs after Tully was banished upon the score of this h●ving executed the Conspirators, by P. Clodiu●; and eighteen years after had his Head and Hands cut off by the Son in ●a● of P. Lentulus, M. Antony. violence of of the ill-affected, shall deceive and over-match my expectation, I commend to you my little (q) Octavius Augus●us accordingly in process of time took M. ●ullius, Cicero 's Son, to be his Colleague in the Consulship, and gratified him with liberty to throw down a●l the Statues of M. Anton●, and to enact that none of the Family of the An●onies should ever af●er be named Mark. Son, who assuredly shall have guard enough, not only for preservation, but also for honour, if ye shall remember, that he is his Son, who has alone at his own peril preserved the whole State. 24. Wherefore, My Lords, Resolve cautiously, as ye have begun, and stoutly, concerning your own and the Roman Peoples Being, that lies at Stake, concerning, your Wives and Children, concerning your Temples and Religious Places, concerning the Houses and Mansions of the whole City, concerning Empire and Liberty, concerning the safety of Italy, and concerning the whole Commonwealth; for ye have a Consul, who shall never dispute to follow your Orders, and is able, whatsoever you shall decree, as long as he shall live, to defend and by his own interest maintain. FINIS.