[146]
for I do not think that either Scylla or Charybdis was such an enemy to sailors, as
that man has been in the same waters. And in one respect he is far more to be
dreaded than they, because he is girdled with more numerous and more powerful hounds
than they were. He is a second Cyclops, far
more savage than the first; for Verres had possession of the whole island;
Polyphemus is said to have occupied only Aetna and that part of Sicily. But what pretext was alleged at the time by that man for this
outrageous cruelty? The same which is now going to be stated in his defence. He used
to say whenever any one came to Sicily a
little better off than usual, that they were soldiers of Sertorius, and that they
were flying from Dianium. 1 They brought him presents to gain his protection from danger;
some brought him Tyrian purple, others brought frankincense, perfumes, and linen
robes; others gave jewels and pearls; some offered great bribes and Asiatic slaves,
so that it was seen by their very goods from what place they came. They were not
aware that those very things which they thought that they were employing as aids to
ensure their safety, were the causes of their danger. For he would say that they had
acquired those things by partnership with pirates, he would order the men themselves
to be led away to the stone-quarries, he would see that their ships and their
freights were diligently taken care of.
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