4. Take the case of Q. Fabius Maximus, the man, I mean, who
recovered Tarentum. When I was a young man and he an old one,
I was as much attached to him as if he had been my contemporary.
For that great man 5 serious dignity was tempered by courteous
manners, nor had old age made any change in his character. True,
he was not exactly an old man when my devotion to him began, yet
he was nevertheless well on in life; for his first consulship fell in
the year after my birth. When quite a stripling I went with him in
his fourth consulship as a soldier in the ranks, on the expedition
against Capua, and in the fifth year after that against Tarentum.
Four years after that I was elected Quaestor, holding office in the
consulship of Tuditanus and Cethegus, in which year, indeed, he as
a very old man spoke in favour of the Cincian law "on gifts and
fees."
Now this man conducted wars with all the spirit of youth when he
was far advanced in life, and by his persistence gradually wearied
out Hannibal, when rioting in all the confidence of youth. How
brilliant are those lines of my friend Ennius on him!
For us, down beaten by the storms of fate,
One man by wise delays restored the State.
Praise or dispraise moved not his constant mood,
True to his purpose, to his country's good!
Down ever-lengthening avenues of fame
Thus shines and shall shine still his glorious name.
Again what vigilance, what profound skill did he show in the
capture of Tarentum! It was indeed in my hearing that he made
the famous retort to Salinator, who had retreated into the citadel
after losing the town: "It was owing to me, Quintus Fabius, that
you retook Tarentum." Quite so," he replied with a laugh; "for had
you not lost it, I should never have recovered it." Nor was he less
eminent in civil life than in war. In his second consulship, though
his colleague would not move in the matter, he resisted as long as
he could the proposal of the tribune C. Flaminius to divide the
territory of the Picenians and Gauls in free allotments in defiance
of a resolution of the Senate. Again, though he was an augur, he
ventured to say that whatever was done in the interests of the State
was done with the best possible auspices, that any laws proposed
against its interest were proposed against the auspices. I was
cognisant of much that was admirable in that great man, but
nothing struck me with greater astonishment than the way in which
he bore the death of his son-a man of brilliant character and who
had been consul. His funeral speech over him is in wide
circulation, and when we read it, is there any philosopher of whom
we do not think meanly? Nor in truth was he only great in the light
of day and in the sight of his fellow-citizens; he was still more
eminent in private and at home. What a wealth of conversation!
What weighty maxims! What a wide acquaintance with ancient
history! What an accurate knowledge of the science of augury! For
a Roman, too, he had a great tincture of letters. He had a tenacious
memory for military history of every sort, whether of Roman or
foreign wars. And I used at that time to enjoy his conversation with
a passionate eagerness, as though I already divined, what actually
turned out to be the case, that when he died there would be no one
to teach me anything.
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