[67]
About this time a little later than he himself would approve, Cnaeus
Pompeius, greatly against the will of those men who by their own
contrivances and by false alarms had turned away the inclination of that
most virtuous and gallant man from the defence of my safety, awakened again
that habit which he had of devotion to the cause of the good government of
the republic, which had been, I will not say lulled asleep, but a little
checked and blasted by some sort of suspicion. That man, who
by his virtuous valour had subdued the most wicked of citizens, and the most
active of foreign enemies, and the mightiest nations, and kings, and savage
and hitherto unheard-of tribes, and a countless host of pirates, and also
the slaves; who, having put a happy end to every war by land and sea, had
made the boundaries of the empire of the Roman people co-equal with the
extent of the world; would not allow that republic to be overturned by the
wickedness of a few men, which, he himself had repeatedly saved, not only by
his counsels, but even by his own blood; he came to the succour of the
public cause; he resisted the remainder of those men's measures by his
authority; he addressed to the authorities complaints as to what had already
happened.
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