Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 3.47.1-2

At dawn in the city, with the citizens standing in the forum in tense anticipation, Verginius arrives in mourning dress leading his daughter in shabby clothing accompanied by a group of matrons and a great crowd of supporters; he goes around pressing men for help, calling in debts owed to him as a soldier who has stood in battle daily for their wives and children, asking what good it is that the city stands safe if his own children must suffer what people fear most in a captured city, while Icilius makes similar appeals and the silent weeping of the women moves the crowd more than any words.

 

Tier 1

Sed in urbe, prima luce, civitas staret in foro, erecta expectatione, Verginius, in vestimentis tristibus, secum filiam in forum deducit. Filiae erat vestimenta obsoleta. Erant Matronae cum advocationibus.

Verginius coepit circumire in eo loco et tangere homines et non solum orare precariam opem, sed petere pro debita. Verginio multa debita sunt quia Verginius cottidie in acie stabat pro liberis et coniugibus Romanorum, nec alius vir est cuius facta in bello possent memorari magis quam facta Verginii:

Ubi est bonum in urbe secura si res, quae in capta urbe timeantur, patienda sint liberis suis? Dicens haec publice, Verginius prope homines circumibat. Icilius dicebat verba similia his. Turba feminarum movebat tacito fletu plus quam ulla vox.

Written by Robert Amstutz