12.
And I will say this further, O Torquatus, to prevent any wicked man from conceiving any
sudden attachment to, or any sudden hopes of you; and, in order that every one may hear it, I
will say it as loudly as I can:—Of all those things which I undertook and did during
my consulship in defence of the common safety, that Lucius Torquatus, being my constant
comrade in my consulship, and having been so also in my praetorship, was my defender; and
assistant, and partner in my actions; being also the chief; and the leader, and the
standard-bearer of the Roman youth; and his father, a man most devoted to his country, a man
of the greatest courage, of the most consummate political wisdom, and of singular firmness,
though he was sick still was constantly present at all my actions he never left my side: he by
his zeal and wisdom and authority was of the very greatest assistance to me,
overcoming the infirmity of his body by the vigour of his mind.
[35]
Do you not see now, how I deliver you from the danger of any sudden
popularity among the wicked, and reconcile you to all good men? who love you, and cherish you,
and who always will cherish you; nor, if perchance you for a while abandon me, will they on
that account allow you to abandon them and the republic and your own dignity.
But now I return to the cause; and I call you, O judges, to hear witness to
this;—that this necessity of speaking of myself was imposed on me by him. For if
Torquatus had been content with accusing Sulla, I too at the present time should have done
nothing beyond defending him who had been accused; but when he, in his whole speech, inveighed
against me, and when, in the very beginning, as I said, he sought to deprive my defence of all
authority, even if my indignation had not compelled me to speak, still the necessity of doing
justice to my cause would have demanded this speech from me.
This text is part of:
Search the Perseus Catalog for:
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.

