<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi002.perseus-eng2:57-70</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi002.perseus-eng2:57-70</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi002.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="57" resp="perseus"><p>Some of you are geese, who only cry out, and have no power to hurt, some are dogs who
          can both bark and bite. We see that food is provided for you; but you ought chiefly to
          attack those who deserve it. This is most pleasing to the people; then if you will, then
          you may bark on suspicion when it seems probable that some one has committed a crime. That
          may be allowed. But if you act in such a way as to accuse a man of having murdered his
          father, without being able to say why or how; and if you are only barking without any
          ground for suspicion, no one, indeed, will break your legs; but if I know these judges
          well, they will so firmly affix to your heads that letter <note anchored="true">The letter
            was K, which was branded on the forehead of those who were convicted of bringing false
            accusations, being the first letter of the word <foreign xml:lang="la">kalumnia</foreign> as it was originally spelt. It was also the first letter of the
            word <foreign xml:lang="la">kalendae</foreign> and on the calends of each month debts
            were accustomed to be got in and bonds were liable to be paid.</note> to which you are
          so hostile that you hate all the Calends too, that you shall hereafter be able to accuse
          no one but your own fortunes.</p></div><milestone n="21" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="58" resp="perseus"><p>What have you given me to defend my client against, my good accuser? And what ground have
          you given these judges for any suspicion? He was afraid of being disinherited. I hear you.
          But no one says what ground he had for fear. His father had it in contemplation. Prove it.
          There is no proof; there is no mention of any one with whom he deliberated about it—whom
          he told of it; there is no circumstance from which it could occur to your minds to suspect
          it. When you bring accusations in this manner, O Erucius, do you not plainly say this? “I
          know what I have received, but I do not know what to say. I have had regard to that alone
          which Chrysogonus said, that no one would be his advocate; that there was no one who would
          dare at this time to say a word about the purchase of the property, and about that
          conspiracy.” This false opinion prompted you to this dishonesty. You would not in truth
          have said a word if you had thought that any one would answer you.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="59" resp="perseus"><p>It were worth while, if you have noticed it, O judges, to consider this
          man's carelessness in bringing forward his accusations. I imagine, when he saw what men
          were sitting on those benches, that he inquired whether this man or that man was going to
          defend him; that he never even dreamt of me, because I have never pleaded any public cause
          before. After he found that no one was going to defend him of those men who have the
          ability and are in the habit of so doing, he began to be so careless that, when it suited
          his fancy he sat down, then he walked about, sometimes he even called his boy, I suppose
          to give him orders for supper, and utterly overlooked your assembly and all this court as
          if it had been a complete desert.</p></div><milestone n="22" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="60" resp="perseus"><p>At length he summed up. He sat down. I got up. He seemed to breathe again because no one
          else rose to speak other than I. I began to speak. I noticed, O judges, that he was joking
          and doing other things, up to the time when I named Chrysogonus; but as soon as I touched
          him, my man at once raised himself up. He seemed to be astonished. I knew what had pinched
          him. I named him a second time, and a third. After, men began to run hither arid thither,
          I suppose to tell Chrysogonus that there was some one who dared to speak contrary to his
          will, that the cause was going on differently from what he expected, that the purchase of
          the goods was being ripped up; that the conspiracy was being severely handled; that his
          influence and power was being disregarded; that the judges were attending diligently; that
          the matter appeared scandalous to the people.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="61" resp="perseus"><p>And since
          you were deceived in all this, O Erucius, and since you see that everything is altered;
          that the cause on behalf of Sextus Roscius is argued, if not as it should be, at all
          events with freedom, since you see that be is defended whom you thought was abandoned,
          that those who you expected would deliver him up to you are judging impartially, give us
          again, at last, some of your old skill and prudence; confess that you came hither with the
          hope that there would he a robbery here, not a trial. A trial is held on a charge of
          parricide, and no reason is alleged by the accuser why the son has slain his father.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="62" resp="perseus"><p>That which, in even the least offences and in the
          more trifling crimes, which are more frequent and of almost daily occurrence, is asked
          most earnestly and as the very first question, namely what motive there was for the
          offence; that Erucius does not think necessary to be asked in a case of parricide. A
          charge which, O judges, even when many motives appear to concur, and to be connected with
          one another, is still not rashly believed, nor is such a case allowed to depend on slight
          conjecture, nor is any uncertain witness listened to, nor is the matter decided by the
          ability of the accuser. Many crimes previously committed must be proved, and a most
          profligate life on the part of the prisoner, and singular audacity, and not only audacity,
          but the most extreme frenzy and madness. When all these things are proved, still there
          must exist express traces of the crime: where, in what manner, by whose means, and at what
          time the crime was committed. And unless these proofs are numerous and evident—so wicked,
          so atrocious, so nefarious a deed cannot be believed.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="63" resp="perseus"><p>
          For the power of human feeling is great; the connection of blood is of mighty power;
          nature herself cries out against suspicions of this sort; it is a most undeniable portent
          and prodigy, for any one to exist in human shape, who so far outruns the beasts in
          savageness, as in a most scandalous manner to deprive those of life by whose means he has
          himself beheld this most delicious light of life; when birth, and bringing up, and nature
          herself make even beasts friendly to each other.</p></div><milestone n="23" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="64" resp="perseus"><p>Not many years ago they say that Titius Cloelius, a citizen of <placeName key="tgn,7006704">Terracina</placeName>, a well-known man, when, having supped, he had
          retired to rest in the same room with his two youthful sons, was found in the morning with
          his throat cut: when no servant could be found nor any free man, on whom suspicion of the
          deed could be fixed, and his two sons of that age lying near him said that they did not
          even know what had been done; the sons were accused of the parricide. What followed? it
          was, indeed, a suspicious business; that neither of them were aware of it, and that some
          one had ventured to introduce himself into that chamber, especially at that time when two
          young men were in the same place, who might easily have heard the noise and defended him.
          Moreover, there was no one on whom suspicion of the deed could fall.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="65" resp="perseus"><p>Still as it was plain to the judges that they were found sleeping with
          the door open, the young men were acquitted and released from all suspicion. For no one
          thought that there was any one who, when he had violated all divine and human laws by a
          nefarious crime, could immediately go to sleep; because they who have committed such a
          crime not only cannot rest free from care, but cannot even breathe without fear.</p></div><milestone n="24" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="66" resp="perseus"><p>Do you not see in the case of those whom the poets have handed down to us, as having, for
          the sake of avenging their father, inflicted punishment on their mother, especially when
          they were said to have done so at the command and in obedience to the oracles of the
          immortal gods, how the furies nevertheless haunt them, and never suffer them to rest,
          because they could not be pious without wickedness. And this is the truth, O judges. The
          blood of one's father and mother has great power, great obligation, is a most holy thing,
          and if any stain of that falls on one, it not only cannot be washed out, but it drips down
          into the very soul, so that extreme frenzy and madness follow it.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="67" resp="perseus"><p>For do not believe, as you often see it written in fables, that they
          who have done anything impiously and wickedly are really driven about and frightened by
          the furies with burning torches. It is his own dishonesty and the terrors of his own
          conscience that especially harassed each individual; his own wickedness drives each
          criminal about and affects him with madness; his own evil thoughts, his own evil
          conscience terrifies him. These are to the wicked their incessant and domestic furies
          which night and day exact from wicked sons punishment for the crimes committed against
          their parents.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="68" resp="perseus"><p>This enormity of the crime is the cause
          why, unless a parricide is proved in a manner almost visible, it is not credible, unless a
          man's youth has been base, unless his life has been stained with every sort of wickedness,
          unless his extravagance has been prodigal and accompanied with shame and disgrace, unless
          his audacity has been violent, unless his rashness has been such as to be not far removed
          from insanity. There must be, besides a hatred of his father, a fear of his father's
          reproof—worthless friends, slaves privy to the deed, a convenient opportunity, a place
          fitly selected for the business. I had almost said the judges must see his hands stained
          with his father's blood, if they are to believe so monstrous, so barbarous, so terrible a
          crime.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="69" resp="perseus"><p>On which account, the less credible it is unless
          it be proved, the more terribly is it to be punished if it be proved. 
          <milestone n="25" unit="chapter" resp="yonge"/><milestone unit="Para"/>
          Therefore, it may be understood by many circumstances that our ancestors surpassed other
          nations not only in arms, but also in wisdom and prudence; and also most especially by
          this, that they devise a singular punishment for the impious. And in this matter consider
          how far they surpassed in prudence those who are said to have been the wisest of all
          nations.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="70" resp="perseus"><p>The state of the Athenians is said to have
          been the wisest while it enjoyed the supremacy. Moreover of that state they say that Solon
          was the wisest man, he who made the laws which they use even to this day. When he was
          asked why he had appointed no punishment for him who killed his father, he answered that
          he had not supposed that any one would do so. He is said to have done wisely in
          establishing nothing about a crime which had up to that time never been committed, lest he
          should seem not so much to forbid it as to put people in mind of it. How much more wisely
          did our ancestors act! for as they understood that there was nothing so holy that audacity
          did not sometimes violate it, they devised a singular punishment for parricides in order
          that they whom nature herself had not been able to retain in their duty, might be kept
          from crime by the enormity of the punishment. They ordered them to be sown alive in a
          sack, and in that condition to be thrown into the river.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>