7.
[17]
And even this must not be neglected by you, which I had proposed to myself as the last thing
to be mentioned, when I was to speak of the kind of war, for it concerns the property of many
Roman citizens; whom you, as becomes your wisdom, O Romans, must regard with the most careful
solicitude. The publicans, 1 most honourable and
accomplished men, have taken all their resources and all their wealth into that province; and
their property and fortunes ought, by themselves, to be an object of your special care. In
truth, if we have always considered the revenues as the sinews of the republic, certainly we
shall be right if we call that order of men which collects them, the prop and support of all
the other orders.
[18]
In the next place, clever and industrious
men, of all the other orders of the state, are some of them actually trading themselves in
Asia, and you ought to show a regard for their
interests in their absence; and others of them have large sums invested in that province. It
will, therefore become your humanity to protect a large number of those citizens from
misfortune; it will become your wisdom to perceive that the misfortune of many citizens cannot
be separated from the misfortune of the republic. In truth, firstly, it is of but little
consequence for you afterwards to recover for the publicans revenues which have been once
lost; for the same men have not afterwards the same power of contracting for them, and others
have not the inclination, through fear.
[19]
In the next place,
that which the same Asia, and that same Mithridates
taught us, at the beginning of the Asiatic war that, at all events, we, having learnt by
disaster, ought to keep in our recollection. For we know that then, when many had lost large
fortunes in Asia, all credit failed at Rome, from payments being hindered. For it is not possible for
many men to lose their property and fortunes in one city, without drawing many along with them
into the same vortex of disaster. But do you now preserve the republic from this misfortune;
and believe me, (you yourselves see that it is the case,) this credit, and this state of the
money-market which exists at Rome and in the forum,
is bound up with, and is inseparable from, those fortunes which are invested in Asia. Those fortunes cannot fall without credit here being
undermined by the came blow, and perishing along with them. Consider, then, whether you ought
to hesitate to apply yourselves with all zeal to that war, in which the glory of your name,
the safety of your allies, your greatest revenues, and the fortunes of numbers of your
citizens, will be protected at the same time as the republic.
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1 It has been said before that the publicans were taken almost exclusively from the equestrian order.
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