[67]
At this point you are constantly reading passages from my letter, which I sent to Cnaeus
Pompeius about my own achievements, and about the general state of the republic; and out of it
you seek to extract some charge against Publius Sulla. And because I wrote that an attempt of
incredible madness, conceived two years before, had broken out in my consulship, you say that
I, by this expression, have proved that Sulla was in the former conspiracy. I suppose I think
that Cnaeus Piso, and Catiline, and Vargunteius were not able to do any wicked or audacious
act by themselves, without the aid of Publius Sulla!
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