[44]
These men say that they gave Flaccus and those who were with him fifteen thousand drachmas.
I have to do with a most active city, and one which is an admirable hand at keeping its
accounts; a city in which not a farthing can be disposed of without the intervention of five
praetors, three quaestors, and four bankers, who are elected in that city by the burgesses. Of
all that number not one has been brought hither as a witness; and when they return that money
as having been given to Flaccus by name, they say that they gave him also a still larger sum,
entered as having been given for the repair of a temple. But this is not a very consistent
story; for either everything ought to have been kept secret or else everything ought to have
been returned without any disguise. When they enter the money as having been given to Flaccus,
naming him expressly, they fear nothing, they apprehend nothing. When they return the money as
having been given for a public work, then all of a sudden those same men begin to be afraid of
the very man whom they had despised before. If the praetor gave the money, as it is set down,
he drew it from the quaestor, the quaestor from the public bank, the public bank derived it
either from revenue or from tribute. All this will never be like a crime, unless you explain
to me the whole business both with respect to the persons and to the accounts.
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