[66]
But I do not know, O judges, whether what happened then did not do me more
good than if every one had congratulated me. For after I learnt from this
that the people of Rome had deaf
ears, but very sharp and active eyes, I gave up thinking what men would have
said of me; but took care that they should every day see me in their
presence: I lived in their sight; I stuck to the forum; neither my porter
nor even sleep was allowed to prevent any one from having access to me. Need
I say anything about my time which was devoted to business, when even my
leisure time was never my own? For the very orations which you say, O
Cassius, that you are in the habit of reading when you are at leisure, I
wrote on days of festival and on holidays, so that I never was at leisure at
all. In truth, I have always thought that saying of Marcus Cato, which he
put at the head of his Origines, a splendid and admirable
one: “That eminent and great men ought to lay down a regular plan
for their leisure as well as for their business.”
And, therefore, if I have any credit, I hardly know how much I have; it has
all been acquired at Rome and
earned in the forum. And public events have sanctioned my private counsels
in such a way that even at home I have had to attend to the general
interests of the republic, and to preserve the city while in the city. The
same road, O Cassius, is open to Laterensis, the same path by virtue to
glory.
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