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Pro S. Roscio Amerino

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O INTRODtrCTION.<br />

conflict. Tlie youuger Sextus seems to liave neglectecT to<br />

exainine tlie two slaves who accompanied his father immediately<br />

on their return from Eome, and may thus at first<br />

have caiised vague suspicion to attach to himself<br />

The first nevps of the murder was carried to Ameria, not<br />

by one of these two slaves, but by one Mallius Grlaucia, a<br />

client of T. Eoscius Magnus. This mau announced the<br />

tidings not, as one would naturally expect, to tbe son, but<br />

to Roscius Capito ; he arrived at Ameria at early dawn on<br />

the moruing after the murder, and thus seems to have<br />

travelled all night for the express purpose of bringing the<br />

news as quickly as possible. Within four days Chrysogonus,<br />

who was in Sulla's camp at Volaterrae in Etruria,<br />

got word of the matter, evidently through the same source.<br />

He was persoually a stranger to the murdered man ; all he<br />

was interested in knowing was that a considerable estate<br />

had been left.<br />

Chrysogonus, ever on the look-out for fresh spoil, had<br />

the name of the elder Eoscius inserted on the proscription<br />

lists (although these had been closed for some months),<br />

and at a sham sale purchased the confiscated property at<br />

a nominal price. A few days after, Magnus appeared<br />

in Ameria, drove Sextus Eoscius from house and home,<br />

and took possession, as the agent of Chrysogonus, of ten<br />

of the farms, the other three being handed over to Capito.<br />

The movable property was secretly disposed of or sold by<br />

private auction.<br />

These high-handed proceedings caused the utmost indignation<br />

at Ameria. The local senate at once sent an embassy,<br />

consisting of the ten leading senators (among them Eoscius<br />

Capito) to the camp of Sulla, with the purpose of proving<br />

the loyalty of the elder Eoscius, of getting his name expunged<br />

from the proscription lists, and of reinstating his<br />

son in his ancestral estate. But Chrysogonus, being<br />

informed of the embassy by Capito, managed matters so<br />

that the envoys never got an interview with the Dictator.<br />

He made them specious promises, and since Capito pledged<br />

his word that these promises would be faithfully kept, the<br />

ambassadors allowed themselves to be persuaded, and returned<br />

home without effecting anything.

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