5.
[17]
The next thing is, since it is evident that the Sicilians have demanded this of me, for
us to inquire whether it is right that this fact should have any influence on you and on
your judgments; whether the allies of the Roman people, your suppliants, ought to have
any weight with you in a matter of extortion committed on themselves. And why need I say
much on such a point as this? as if there were any doubt that the whole law about
extortion was established for the sake of the allies.
[18]
For when citizens have been robbed of their money, it is usually sought to be recovered
by civil action and by a private suit. This is a law affecting the
allies,—this is a right of foreign nations. They have this fortress somewhat
less strongly fortified now than it was formerly, but still if there be any hope left
which can console the minds of the allies, it is all placed in this law. And strict
guardians of this law have long since been required, not only by the Roman people, but
by the most distant nations.
[19]
Who then is there who
can deny that it is right that the trial should be conducted according to the wish of
those men for whose sake the law has been established? All Sicily, if it could speak with one voice, would say
this:—“All the gold, all the silver, all the ornaments which were in
my cities, in my private houses, or in my temples,—all the rights which I had
in any single thing by the kindness of the senate and Roman people,—all that
you, O Caius Verres, have taken away and robbed me of, on which account I demand of you
a hundred million of sesterces according to the
law.” If the whole province, as I have said, could speak, it would say this,
and as it could not speak, it has of its own accord chosen an advocate to urge these
points, whom it has thought suitable.
[20]
In a matter of
this sort, will any one be found so impudent as to dare to approach or to aspire to the
conduct of the cause of others against the will of those very people whose affairs are
involved in it?
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