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THE SIXTH ORATION OF M. T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO THE SIXTH PHILIPPIC. ADDRESSED TO THE PEOPLE.
[102]
You led a colony to Casilinum, a place
to which Caesar had previously led one. You did indeed consult me by letter
about the colony of Capua (but I
should have given you the same answer about Casilinum), whether you could legally lead a new colony to a
place where there was a colony already. I said that a new colony could not be
legally conducted to an existing colony, which had been established with a due
observance of the auspices, as long as it remained in a flourishing state; but I
wrote you word that new colonists might be enrolled among the old ones. But you,
elated and insolent, disregarding all the respect due to the auspices, led a
colony to Casilinum, whither one had
been previously led a few years before; in order to erect your standard there,
and to mark out the line of the new colony with a plow. And by that plow you
almost grazed the gate of Capua, so
as to diminish the territory of that flourishing colony.
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