[127]
Does not Numa Pompilius appear to be speaking to you? Learn his speech by
heart, O priests, and flamens. Do you too, O king of the sacrifices, learn
of the man of your own family; although, indeed, he has quitted that family;
but still learn from a man entirely devoted to religious observances, and
just, and deeply skilled in all questions of religion. What? in the case of
a dedication do not people inquire who says such and such a thing, and what
he says, and how? Do you so confuse and mix up these matters, that whoever
chooses can dedicate whatever he chooses, and in whatever manner he chooses?
Who were you who performed the dedication? By what right did you do so? By
what law? According to what precedent? By what power? When and where had the
Roman people appointed you to manage that business? For I see that there is
an old tribunitian law, which forbids any one to consecrate any house, land,
or altar, without the order of the Roman people. Quintus Papirius, who
proposed this law, did not perceive nor suspect that there would be danger
lest hereafter the houses or possessions of citizens who had not been
condemned might be consecrated. For that could not lawfully be done; nor had
any one ever done such a thing; nor was there any reason why a prohibition
should be issued, the effect of which appeared likely to be not so much to
deter people from an action as to remind them of it.
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