[14]
However, to say nothing of violence, what conduct is this?
which, since it was adopted according to the privileges and customs of prosecutors we cannot
impeach, but still we are compelled to complain if it. I mean, first of all, the making a
statement which has been bruited abroad over all Asia, (different people having had regular
districts assigned to them, in which they were to spread the report,) that
Cnaeus Pompeius, because he is a most zealous enemy to Lucius Flaccus, had begged of Decimus
Laelius, his father's and his own most intimate friend, to prosecute him on this charge, and
that he placed at his disposal for the furtherance of this business, all his own authority,
and influence, and resources, and riches. And this appeared all the more probable to the
Greeks, because a little before they had seen Laelius in the same province with Flaccus, and
on terms of great intimacy with him. And as the authority of Pompeius is great with every one,
as indeed it ought to be, so especially is it predominant in that province which he has lately
delivered from the war which pirates and kings were waging against it. He did this besides:
those who did not wish to leave their homes he terrified with a summons to give their
evidence; those who could not remain at home, he provided with a large and liberal sum for
travelling expenses.
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