[188]
What a prodigy is this, O ye immortal gods! What shall
we say of this enormity? What shall we call this enormous and inhuman wickedness, or where
shall we say it has its birth? For now, in truth, you see, O judges, that I did not, at the
beginning of my oration, say what I did about his mother without the strongest and most
unavoidable necessity; for there is no evil, no wickedness, which she has not from the very
beginning wished, and prayed for, and planned and wrought against her son. I say nothing of
that first jury which she did him through her lust—I say nothing of her nefarious
marriage with her son-in-law—I say nothing of her daughter driven from her husband
by the profligate desires of her mother,—because they have relation, not to the
existing danger of his life to my client, but to the common disgrace of the family. I say
nothing of the second marriage with Oppianicus, to ensure which she first received from him
his dead sons as hostages, and then married, to the grief of the family, and the destruction
of her stepsons. I pass over how, when she knew that Aurius Melinus, whose mother-in-law she
had formerly been, and whose wife she had been a little before that, had been proscribed and
murdered by the contrivance of Oppianicus, she chose for herself that place as the abode and
home of her married state, in which she might every day behold the proofs of the death of her
former husband, and the spoils of his fortune.
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