[41]
But if, O judges, you wish to know the truth,—if the liberality of
Caius Caesar, which is very great to every one, had not been quite
incredible towards my client, we should long since have ceased to have
Postumus among us in the forum. He, by himself, took upon himself the burden
of many of Postumus's friends; and those responsibilities, which during the
prosperity of Postumus many of his friends supported by dividing them, now
that he is unfortunate, Caesar supports the whole of. You see, O judges, the
shadow and phantom of a Roman knight preserved by the assistance and good
faith of one single friend. Nothing can be taken from him except this image
of his former dignity, and that Caesar by himself preserves and maintains.
And that, even amid his greatest distresses, is still to be attributed to
him in an eminent degree.
Unless, indeed, this can be effected by a moderate degree of virtue, that so
just a man as Caesar should think this my client of so much consequence,
especially now that he is in distress and absent, and while he himself is in
the enjoyment of such splendid fortune that it is a great thing for him to
give a thought to the fortunes of others; while he is so incessantly busied
about the mighty achievements which he has performed and is still
performing, that it would be no wonder if he forgot other people altogether;
and even if be afterwards recollected that he had forgotten them, he would
easily find excuse for so doing.
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