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[25] Indeed, if those perfumers had beheld your colleague Gabinius as their duumviri; 1 they would sooner have acknowledged him. He at least had carefully-dressed hair, and perfumed fringes of curls, and anointed and carefully-rouged cheeks, worthy of Capua,—of Capua, I mean, such as it used to be. For the Capua that now is is full of most excellent characters, of most gallant men, of most virtuous citizens, and of men most friendly and devoted to me; not one of whom ever saw you at Capua clad in your praetexta without groaning out of regret for me, by whose counsels they recollected that the whole republic and that city in particular had been preserved. They had paid me the honour of a gilded statue; they had adopted me as their especial patron; they considered that it was owing to me that they were still enjoying their lives, their fortunes, and their children; they had defended me when I was present against your piratical attacks, by their decrees, and by their deputations; and when I was absent they recalled me, when that great man Cnaeus Pompeius submitted the motion to them, and tore the weapons of your wickedness out of the body or the republic.


1 Duumvir was the title of the chief magistrate in the colonies and municipal towns in Italy.

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  • Cross-references to this page (2):
    • A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), SCRIBA
    • A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), TRIUMPHUS
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