<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi008.perseus-eng2:1-20</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi008.perseus-eng2:1-20</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi008.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="1" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>If shameless impudence had as much power in the forum and in the courts of law, as audacity
    has in the country and in desolate places, then Aulus Caecina would now, in this trial, yield to
    the impudence of Sextus Aebutius as much as he has already yielded to his audacity in committing
    deeds of violence. But he thought that it became a considerate man not to contend in arms about
    a matter which ought to be decided by law; and he thought that it became an honest man, to
    defeat by law and judicial proceedings the man with whom he had declined contending in arms and
    violence. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="2" resp="perseus"><p> And Aebutius appears to me to have been most
    especially audacious in assembling and arming men, and most especially impudent in his legal
    measures. Not only in that he has dared to come before the court, (for that, although it is a
    scandalous thing to do in a clear case, still is an ordinary course for wicked and artful men to
    adopt,) but because he has not hesitated to avow the very act which he is accused of; unless,
    perhaps, his idea was this,—if ordinary <note anchored="true">The usual course on claiming
     possession of disputed property was for the claimant to present himself with his friends in the
     land, and then to be driven off by the occupant. This violence was <foreign xml:lang="lat">vis
      moribus facta</foreign>. On this the claimant appealed to the praetor. But Aebutius had driven
     Caecina off with armed men, and had used unnecessary and actual violence. This was <foreign xml:lang="lat">vis contra jus moremque.</foreign></note> violence according to precedent had
    been used, he would not have had any superior right of possession; but as the violence was
    committed in a way contrary to all law and precedent, Aulus Caecina fled in alarm with his
    friends. And so in this count, if he defends his cause according to the custom and established
    principles of all men, he thinks that we shall not be his inferiors in managing our case; but if
    he departs from all usage, the more impudently he conducts himself, the more likely to succeed
    shall he be: as if dishonesty had as much influence in a court of justice as confidence in a
    scene of violence, or as if we had not yielded at that time the more willingly to his audacity,
    in order now with the greater ease to resist his impudence. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="3" resp="perseus"><p>
    Therefore, O judges, I come now to plead the cause in this trial on a very different plan from
    the one I adopted at first. For then the hope of our cause depended on the arguments I could use
    in our defence; now it rests on the confession of our adversary;—then I relied on our witnesses;
    now I rely on theirs. And about them I was formerly anxious, lest, if they were wicked men, they
    should speak falsely,—lest, if they were thought honest men, they should establish their case;
    now I am very much at ease on the subject. For, if they are good men, they assist me by saying
    that on their oaths, which I, not being on my oath, am urging in accusation. But if they are not
    so respectable, they do me no injury, since, if they are believed, then the very facts which we
    urge in accusation are believed; and if credit be not given to them, then credit is refused to
    the witnesses of our adversary.</p></div><milestone n="2" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="4" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>But when I consider the way in which they are conducting their case, I do not see what more
    impudent thing can be said; when I consider your hesitation in airing your decision, I am afraid
    that what they seem to have been doing shamelessly, may have been done cunningly and wisely; for
    if they had denied that violence had been committed by armed men, they would easily have been
    convicted in a plain case by most unimpeachable witnesses: if they had confessed it, and
    defended a deed which can never be rightfully done, as having been done by them at that time
    legally, they hoped— what, indeed, they gained—that they should give you cause to deliberate,
    and inspire you with proper hesitation and scrupulousness in deciding: and also, though that is
    a most scandalous thing, they thought that the trial in this case would appear to be not about
    the dishonesty of Sextus Aebutius, but about the civil law. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="5" resp="perseus"><p>
    And in this case, if I had to plead the cause of Aulus Caecina alone, I should profess myself a
    sufficiently capable defender of it, because I had behaved with the greatest good faith and
    diligence; and when these qualities are found in an advocate, there is no reason, especially in
    a plain and simple matter, for requiring any extraordinary ability. But as I have now to speak
    of those rights which concern all men,—which were established by our ancestors, and have been
    preserved to this time; while, if they were taken away, not only would some part of our rights
    be diminished, but also that violence, which is the greatest enemy to law, would seem to be
    strengthened by that decision,—I see that the cause is one requiring the greatest abilities, not
    in order to demonstrate what is before men's eyes, but to prevent (if any mistake is made by you
    in so important a matter) every one from thinking that I have been wanting to the cause, rather
    than that you have to your religious obligations. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="6" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Although I am persuaded, O judges, that you have not now doubted about the same cause twice,
    on account of the obscure and uncertain state of the law, so much as because this trial appears
    to affect that man's personal character; and on that account you have delayed condemning him,
    and have also given him time to recollect himself. And since that custom has now become a usual
    one, and since good men,— men like yourselves.—do the same when sitting as judges, it is,
    perhaps, less blamable. But still it appears a thing to be complained of, because all judicial
    proceedings have been devised either for the sake of putting an end to disputes, or of punishing
    crimes, of which the first is the least important object, because it is less severe on
    individuals, and because it is often terminated by some friendly mediator. The other is most
    formidable, because it relates to more important matters, and requires not the honorary
    assistance of some friend, but the severity and vigour of a judge. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="7" resp="perseus"><p> That which was the more important, and on account of which judicial
    proceedings were most especially instituted, has been long abolished by evil customs. For the
    more disgraceful a thing is, the more severely and the more promptly ought it to be punished;
    and yet those things which involve danger to a man's character are the slowest to be punished.
     <milestone n="3" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>How, then, can it be right that the same cause which prompted the institution of legal
    proceedings, should also cause the delay that exists in coming to a decision? If any one, when
    he has given security,—when he has bound himself by one word, does not do what he has rendered
    himself liable to do, then he is condemned by the natural course of justice without any appeal
    to the severity of the judge. If a man, as a guardian, or as a partner, or as a person in a
    place of trust, or as any one's agent, has cheated any one, the greater his offence is, the
    slower is his punishment. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="8" resp="perseus"><p> “Yes, for the sentence is a sentence
    of infamy.” “Yes, if it arises from an infamous action.” See, then, how iniquitously it happens,
    that because an action is infamous, therefore a discreditable reputation should attach to it,
    but that a scandalous action is not to be punished, because, if it were, it would involve a loss
    of reputation. It is just as if any judex or recuperator were to say to me, “Why, you might have
    tried it in an inferior court,—you might have obtained your rights by an easier and more
    convenient process; therefore, either change your form of action, or else do not press me to
    give my decision.” And yet he would appear more timid than a bold judge ought to appear, or more
    covetous than it is right for a wise judge to be, if he were either to prescribe to me how I
    should follow up my own rights, or if he were to be afraid himself to give his decision in a
    matter which was brought before him. In truth, if the praetor, who allows the trials to proceed,
    never prescribes to a claimant what form of action he wishes him to adopt, consider how
    scandalous a thing it must be, when the matter is so far settled, for a judge to ask what might
    have been done, or what can be done now, and not what has been done. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="9" resp="perseus"><p> However, in this case we should be complying too much with your good nature if
    we were willing to recover our rights by any process different from that which we are adopting.
    For now, what man is there who thinks that violence offered by armed men ought to be passed
    over; or who can show us a more moderate way of proceeding in so atrocious a case? In the case,
    of offences of such a nature, that, as they keep crying out, criminal trials and capital trials
    have been established on their account, can you find fault with our severity when you see that
    we have done nothing more than claim possession of our property by virtue of the praetor's
    interdict. <milestone n="4" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>But whether you have as yet had your reputation endangered, or whether the doubts about the
    law have hitherto made the judges slow in giving their decision; the former reason you
    yourselves have already removed, by the frequent adjournments of the trial; the other I will
    myself this day take away, that you may not hesitate any longer about our disputing about the
    common law. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="10" resp="perseus"><p> And if I shall appear to go rather further back
    in tracing the origin of the business than either the state of the law which is involved in this
    trial, or the nature of the case compels me to, I beseech you to pardon me; for Aulus Caecina is
    not less anxious to appear to have acted according to the strictest law, than he is to obtain
    what by strict law is his due. 
   <milestone unit="para"/>There was a man named Marcus Fulcinius, O judges, of the municipality of <placeName key="perseus,Tarquinii">Tarquinii</placeName>; who, in his own city, was reckoned one of the
    most honourable men, and also had a splendid business at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> as a banker. He was married to Caesennia, a woman of the same municipality, a
    woman of the highest rank and most unimpeachable character, as he both showed while he was alive
    by many circumstances, and declared also by his will at his death. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="11" resp="perseus"><p> To this Caesennia he had sold a farm in the district of <placeName key="perseus,Tarquinii">Tarquinii</placeName>, at a time of great commercial embarrassment; for
    as he was employing the dowry of his wife, which he had received in ready money, he took care,
    in order that she, being a woman, might have abundant security, to charge her dowry on that
    farm. Some time afterwards, having given up his banking business, Fulcinius buys some lands
    which are contiguous, and adjacent to this farm of his wife's. Fulcinius dies; (for I will pass
    over many circumstances of the case, because they are unconnected with the subject of this
    action;) in his will he makes his son, whom he had by Caesennia, his heir; he bequeaths
    Caesennia a life interest in all his property, which she is to enjoy with his son.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12" resp="perseus"><p> The great
    honour paid her by her husband would have been very agreeable to the woman, if she had been
    allowed to enjoy it long; for she would have been enjoying
    her property in common with him whom she wished to be the heir of her property, and from whom
    she herself was receiving the greatest enjoyment of which she was capable. But or this enjoyment
    she was prematurely deprived by the act of God; for in a short time the young man, Marcus
    Fulcinius, died; he left Publius Caesennius his heir; he bequeathed to his wife an immense sum
    of money, and to his mother the greater part of his landed property; and, accordingly, the women
    divided the inheritance.</p></div><milestone n="5" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>When the auction of the inheritance was appointed to take place, Aebutius, who had long been
    supported by Caesennia though a widowed and solitary woman, and who had insinuated himself into
    her confidence by the system of undertaking (not without some profit to himself) all the
    business which the woman had to transact, and all her disputes —was employed at that time also
    in this transaction of selling and dividing the property. And he always pushed and thrust
    himself in in such a way as to make Caesennia of opinion, that she, being a woman unskilled in
    business, could not get on well in any matter in which Aebutius was not concerned. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14" resp="perseus"><p> The character that you know, from daily experience, O judges, belongs
    to a flatterer of women, all agent of widows, an over-litigious defender, eager for strife,
    ignorant and stupid among men, but a shrewd and clever lawyer among women; this was the
    character of Aebutius. For all this was Aebutius to Caesennia. In case you should ask, is he any
    relation? no one could be more entirely unconnected with her—Was he a friend, recommended to her
    by her father or her husband? Nothing of the sort. Who then was he? He was such a man as I have
    just been depicting— a voluntary friend of the woman, united with her, not by any relationship,
    but by a pretended officiousness, and a deceitful eagerness in her behalf; by an occasional
    assistance, seasonable rather than faithful. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15" resp="perseus"><p> When, as I had
    begun to say, the auction was fixed to take place at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, the friends and relations of Caesennia advised her—as, indeed, had occurred
    to her of her own accord,—that, since she had an opportunity of buying that farm of Fulcinius's
    which was contiguous to her own ancient property, there would be no wisdom in letting such an
    opportunity slip, especially as money was owing to her from the division of the inheritance,
    which could never be invested better. Therefore the woman determines to do so; she gives a
    commission to buy the farm—to whom? to whom do you suppose? Does it not at once occur to every
    one that this was the natural business of the man who was ready to transact all the woman's
    business, of the man without whom nothing could be done with proper skill and wisdom? You are
    quite right—the business is entrusted to Aebutius.</p></div><milestone n="6" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="16" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Aebutius is present at the sale—he bids—many purchasers are deterred, some from goodwill to
    Caesennia, some by the price—the farm is knocked down to Aebutius; Aebutius promises the money
    to the banker, which piece of evidence that excellent man is using now to prove that the
    purchase was made for himself. As if we either denied that it had been knocked down to him, or
    as if there were at the time any one who doubted that it had been bought for Caesennia, when
    most men actually knew, nearly all had heard, and when even these judges might conjecture, that,
    as money was due to Caesennia from that inheritance, it was exceedingly advantageous for her
    that it should be invested in farms; and since those farms which were especially desirable for
    the woman were being sold, and since he was bidding whom no one wondered to see acting for
    Caesennia, no one could possibly suspect was buying them for himself. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="17" resp="perseus"><p> When this purchase had been made, the money was paid by Caesennia; and of this
    that man thinks that no account can be produced, because he himself has detained her
    account-books, and because he has the account-books of the banker in which the money is entered
    as having been paid by him, and credit is given to him for it, as having been received from him;
    as if it could have been properly done in any other manner. When everything had been settled in
    thus way, as we are now stating in this defence of ours, Caesennia took possession of the farm
    and let it; and not long afterwards she married Aulus Caecina. To cut the matter short, the
    woman died having made a will. She makes Caecina her heir to the extent of twenty-three
    twenty-fourths of her fortune; of the remaining twenty-fourth she leaves two-thirds to Marcus
    Fulcinius, a freedman of her first husband, and one-third she leaves to Aebutius. This
    seventy-second part of her property she meant to be a reward to him for the interest he had
    taken in her affairs, and for any trouble that they might have caused him. But he thinks that he
    can make this small fraction a handle for disputing the whole.</p></div><milestone n="7" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="18" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>In the first place he ventured to say that Caecina could not be the heir of Caesennia, because
    he had not the same rights as the rest of the citizens, on account of the disasters and civil
    calamities of the Volaterrans. Did he, therefore, like a timid and ignorant man, who had neither
    courage enough, nor wisdom enough, not think it worth while to enter on a doubtful contest about
    his rights as a citizen? did he yield to Aebutius, and allow him to retain as much as he pleased
    of the property of Caesennia? No; he, as became a brave and wise man, put down and crushed the
    folly and calumny of his adversary. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="19" resp="perseus"><p> As he was in possession
    of the estate, and as Aebutius was exaggerating his seventy-second share unduly, Caecina, as
    heir, demanded an arbitrator, for the purpose of dividing the inheritance. And in a few days,
    when Aebutius saw that he could not pare anything off from Caecina's property by the terror of a
    law-suit, he gives him notice, in the forum at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>,
    that that farm which I have already mentioned, and of which I have shown that he had become the
    purchaser on Caesennia's commission, was his own, and that he had bought it for himself What are
    you saying? you will say to me;—does that farm belong to Aebutius which Caesennia had possession
    of without the least dispute for four years, that is to say, ever since the farm was sold, as
    long as she lived? Yes, for the life-interest in that farm, and its produce, belonged to
    Caesennia, by the will of her husband. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="20" resp="perseus"><p> As he was thus
    artfully planning this singular kind of action, Caecina determined, by the advice of his
    friends, to fix a day on which he would go to offer to take possession, and be formally driven
    off the farm. They confer on the subject; a day is agreed on to suit the convenience of both
    parties; Caecina, with his friends, comes on the appointed day to the castle of <placeName key="perseus,Axia">Axia</placeName>, from which place the farm which is now in question is not
    far distant. There he is informed by many people that Aebutius has collected and armed a great
    number of men, both free-men and slaves. While some marvelled at this, and some did not believe
    it, lo! Aebutius himself comes to the castle. He gives notice to Caecina that he has armed men
    with him, and that, if he comes on the property, he shall never go away again. Caecina and his
    friends agreed that it was best to try how far they could proceed without personal danger.
     </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
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