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And as this is the case, O judges, in the first place for the sake of the republic, than
which nothing ought to be of more importance in the eyes of every one, I do warn you, as I am
entitled to do by my extreme diligence in the cause of the republic, which is well known to
all of you,—I do exhort you, as my consular authority gives me a right to
do,—I do entreat you, as the magnitude of the danger justifies me in dying, to
provide for the tranquillity, for the peace, for the safety, for the lives of yourselves and
of all the rest of your fellow-citizens. In the next place I do appeal to your good faith, O
judges, (whether you may think that I do so in the spirit of an advocate or a friend signifies
but little,) and beg of you, not to overwhelm the recent exaltation of Lucius Murena, an
unfortunate man, of one oppressed both by bodily disease and by vexation of mind, by a fresh
cause for morning. He has been lately distinguished by the greatest kindness of the Roman
people, and has seemed fortunate in being the first man to bring the honours of
the consulship into an old family, and a most ancient municipality. Now, in a mourning and
unbecoming gait, debilitated by sickness, worn out with tears and grief, he is a suppliant to
you, O judges, invoking your good faith, imploring your pity, fixing all his hopes on your
power and your assistance.
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