[13]
And when in the Circus Flaminius 1 (I will not say
the consul had been conducted into the assembly by a tribune of the people, but) the
archpirate had been brought in by another robber, he came first a man of what exceeding
dignity, full of wine, sleep, and debauchery! with hair dripping with ointments, with
carefully arranged locks, with heavy eyes, moist cheeks, a husky and drunken voice; and he, a
grave authority, said that he was greatly displeased at citizens having been executed without
having been formally condemned. Where is it that this great authority has lain hid so long out
of our sight? Why has the extraordinary virtue of this ringletted dunce been wasted so long in
scenes of debauchery and gluttony? For that other man, Caesoninus Calventius, from his youth
up has been habituated to the forum, though, except his assumed and crafty melancholy, there
was no single thing to recommend him,—no knowledge of the law, no skill in speaking,
no knowledge of military affairs or of men, no liberality. And if, while passing him, you
noticed how ungentlemanlike, and rough, and sulky he looked, though you might think him a
barbarian and a boor, still you would not suppose him to be lascivious and profligate.
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1 The Circus Flaminius was outside the walls of the city, and the assembly was held there to allow Caesar to be present, who, being now invested with a military command, could not come into the city.
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