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THE SIXTH ORATION OF M. T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO THE SIXTH PHILIPPIC. ADDRESSED TO THE PEOPLE.
33.
Behold, the day of the comitia for the election of
Dolabella arrives The prerogative century draws its lot. He is quiet. The vote
is declared; he is still silent. The first class is called.1 Its vote is declared. Then, as is the usual course, the
votes are announced. Then the second class. And all this is done faster than I
have told it. When the business is over, that excellent augur (you would say he
must be Caius Laelius) says,—“We adjourn it to another
day.”
[83]
Oh the monstrous impudence of
such a proceeding! What had you seen? what had you perceived? what had you
heard? For you did not say that you had been observing the heavens, and indeed
you do not say so this day. That defect then has arisen, which you on the first
of January had already foreseen would arise, and which you had predicted so long
before. Therefore, in truth, you have made a false declaration respecting the
auspices, to your own great misfortune, I hope, rather than to that of the
republic. You laid the Roman people under the obligations of religion; you as
augurs interrupted an augur; you as consul interrupted a consul by a false
declaration concerning the auspices.
I will say no more, lest I should seem to be pulling to pieces the acts of
Dolabella; which must inevitably sometime or other be brought before our
college.
[84]
But take notice of the arrogance and
insolence of the fellow. As long as you please, Dolabella is a consul
irregularly elected; again, while you please, he is a consul elected with all
proper regard to the auspices. If it means nothing when an augur gives this
notice in those words in which you gave notice, then confess that you, when you
said,—“We adjourn this to another
day,”—were not sober. But if those words have any meaning,
then I, an augur, demand of my colleague to know what that meaning is.
But, lest by any chance, while enumerating his numerous exploits, our speech
should pass over the finest action of Marcus Antonius, let us come to the
Lupercalia.
1 There seems some corruption here. Orellius apparently thinks the case hopeless.
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