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| Caius Sallustius Crispus Conspiracy of Catiline IntraText CT - Text |
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| 37 Nor was this
disaffected spirit confined to those who were actually concerned in the
conspiracy; for the whole of the common people, from a desire of change,
favored the projects of Catiline. This they seemed to do in accordance with
their general character; for, in every state, they that are poor envy those of
a better class, and endeavor to exalt the factious; they dislike the
established condition of things, and long for something new; they are
discontented with their own circumstances, and desire a general alteration;
they can support themselves amidst revolt and sedition, without anxiety, since
poverty does not easily suffer loss. As for the populace of the city, they had become disaffected from various causes. In the first place, such as everywhere took the lead in crime and profligacy, with others who had squandered their fortunes in dissipation, and, in a word, all whom vice and villainy had driven from their homes, had flocked to Rome as a general receptacle of impurity. In the next place, many, who thought of the success of Sylla, when they had seen some raised from common soldiers into senators, and others so enriched as to live in regal luxury and pomp, hoped, each for himself, similar results from victory, if they should once take up arms. In addition to this, the youth, who, in the country, had earned a scanty livelihood by manual labor, tempted by public and private largesses, had preferred idleness in the city to unwelcome toil in the field. To these and all others of similar character, public disorders would furnish subsistence. It is not at all surprising, therefore, that men in distress, of dissolute principles and extravagant expectations, should have consulted the interest of the state no further than as it was subservient to their own. Besides, those whose parents, by the victory of Sylla, had been proscribed, whose property had been confiscated, and whose civil rights had been curtailed, looked forward to the event of a war with precisely the same feelings. All those, too, who were of any party opposed to that of the senate, were desirous rather that the state should be embroiled, than that they themselves should be out of power. This was an evil, which, after many years, had returned upon the community to the extent to which it now prevailed. |
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