[37]
“Accounts rendered to Publius Lentulus, and Lucius
Triarius, quaestors of the city.” Read on—“According
to the decree of the senate.” In order to be allowed to give in accounts
in such a manner as this, he became one of Sulla's party in an instant, and not for
the sake of contributing to the restoration of honour and dignity to the nobility.
Even if you had deserted empty-handed, still your desertion would be decided to be
wicked, your betrayal of your consul, infamous. Oh, Cnaeus Carbo was a bad citizen,
a scandalous consul, a seditious man. He may have been so to others: when did he
begin to be so to you? After he entrusted to you the money, the supplying of corn,
all his accounts, and his army; for if he had displeased you before that, you would
have done the same as Marcus Piso did the year after. When he had fallen by lot to
Lucius Scipio, as consul, he never touched the money, he never joined the army at
all. The opinions he embraced concerning the republic he embraced so as to do no
violence to his own good faith, to the customs of our ancestors, nor to the
obligations imposed on him by the lot which he had drawn.
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