Sallust, The Conspiracy of Catiline
Sallust was a Roman senator and contemporary of Caesar and of Cicero (late first century BC). He was born into a well to do, though not aristocratic, Italian family residing some 100 miles north of Rome. He was wealthy enough to afford a political career in the capital and advanced though lower offices as political dependent of Julius Caesar eventually reaching the rank of praetor (just below that of consul). For reasons that are not entirely clear, he was expelled from the Roman Senate went into retirement and began to write history. The passage here is the introduction to a monograph on a failed coup d'etat of the year 61. In its Sallust gives his views on human nature and the dynamics of Roman success and failure as a constitutional system.