Octavian approved of this policy and promised to adopt it in action, and forthwith sent around to his friends the same evening, asking them to come to the forum early in the morning and bring a crowd with them. There presenting himself to Gaius Antonius, the brother of Antony, who was the city praetor, he said that he accepted the adoption of Caesar; for it is a Roman custom that adoptions are confirmed by witnesses before the praetors. When the public scribes had taken down his declaration, Octavian went from the forum straightway to Antony. The latter was in the gardens that Caesar had given to him, which had formerly been Pompey's.
As Octavian was kept waiting at the vestibule for some time, he interpreted the fact as a sign of Antony's displeasure, but when he was admitted there were greetings and mutual inquiries proper to the occasion. When the time came to speak of the business in hand, Octavian said: "please give me the gold coin. For the rest of my expenses I may perhaps borrow from you, if I may be so bold, or from the public treasury on your security, if you will give it, and I will offer my own property for sale at once."While Octavian was speaking in this fashion Antony was astonished at his freedom of speech and his boldness, which seemed much beyond the bounds of propriety and of his years.
私があなたから、(大胆に申し上げれば)あなたの保安に関する公金からお借りする費用の残りに関して、それを提供していただけるなら、私はすぐに自分の財産を提供します。」Octavianがこのように話している時、アントニーは彼の(礼儀作法と彼の年齢をはるかに越えていると思われる)自由な発言とその大胆さに驚きました。
He was offended by the words because they were wanting in the respect due to him, and still more by the demand for money, and, accordingly, he replied in these somewhat severe terms: "As there will be many private persons to dispute with you concerning single pieces of property, you may assume that this portion will not be uncontested."Feeling outraged by the many insulting things said by Antony, Octavian went away invoking his father repeatedly by name, and offered for sale all the property which had come to him by the inheritance, at the same time endeavouring by this zeal to induce the people to stand by him.