[57]
King Ptolemaeus, who, if he had not as yet been himself styled an ally by
the senate, was at all events the brother of that king, who, while his cause
was identical with his, had long since received that honour from the senate;
and was of the same family, sprung from the same ancestors as his brother,
and had the same claims from the antiquity of his alliance; who, lastly, was
a king, and if not yet an ally, still most certainly not an
enemy; was enjoying the kingdom which had belonged to his father and his
grandfather in peace and quiet, relying on the sovereign power of the Roman
people in a condition of royal ease and tranquillity. While he was never
thinking of any such thing, never suspecting any such thing, a motion was
made and put to the vote of the same troop of labourers and artisans that he
while sitting on his throne, with his purple and sceptre and all the other
ensigns of royal authority, should be placed at the mercy of a public
crier;—a motion was made, I say that the Roman people, which has
been in the habit of restoring their kingdoms even to those kings whom they
have subdued in war, should order that a king who was a friend of the
nation, who was not even said to have done them any injury, who had never
had any claim preferred against him or any demand for the restitution of
anything, should have all his property confiscated and sold with his own
person and liberty.
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