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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Caesar by Plutarch


birth and distinction before they were fairly tried, unless there was
an absolute necessity for it; but that if they were kept confined in
any towns of Italy Cicero himself should choose till Catiline was
defeated, then the senate might in peace and at their leisure
determine what was best to be done.

This sentence of his carried so much appearance of humanity, and
he gave it such advantage by the eloquence with which he urged it,
that not only those who spoke after him closed with it, but even
they who had before given a contrary opinion now came over to
his, till it came about to Catulus’s and Cato’s turn to speak. They
warmly opposed it, and Cato intimated in his speech the suspicion
of Caesar himself, and pressed the matter so strongly that the
criminals were given up to suffer execution. As Caesar was going
out of the senate, many of the young men who at that time acted as
guards to Cicero ran in with their naked swords to assault him. But
Curio, it is said, threw his gown over him, and conveyed him
away, and Cicero himself, when the young men looked up to see
his wishes, gave a sign not to kill him, either for fear of the people
or because he thought the murder unjust and illegal. If this be true,
I wonder how Cicero came to omit all mention of it in his book
about his consulship. He was blamed, however, afterwards, for not
having made use of so fortunate an opportunity against Caesar, as
if he had let it escape him out of fear of the populace, who, indeed,
showed remarkable solicitude about Caesar, and some time after,
when he went into the senate to clear himself of the suspicions he
lay under, and found great clamours raised against him, upon the
senate in consequence sitting longer than ordinary, they went up to
the house in a tumult, and beset it, demanding Caesar, and
requiring them to dismiss him. Upon this, Cato, much fearing some
movement among the poor citizens, who were always the first to
kindle the flame among the people, and placed all their hopes in
Caesar, persuaded the senate to give them a monthly allowance of
corn, an expedient which put the commonwealth to the
extraordinary charge of seven million five hundred thousand
drachmas in the year, but quite succeeded in removing the great
cause of terror for the present, and very much weakened Caesar’s
power, who at that time was just going to be made praetor, and
consequently would have been more formidable by his office.

But there was no disturbance during his praetorship, only what
misfortune he met with in his own domestic affairs. Publius
Clodius was a patrician by descent, eminent both for his riches and
eloquence, but in licentiousness of life and audacity exceeded the
most noted profligates of the day. He was in love with Pompeia,
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