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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi1002.phi001.perseus-eng2:6.1.16-6.1.35</requestUrn>
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                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1002.phi001.perseus-eng2" type="translation" xml:lang="eng"><div n="6" type="textpart" subtype="book"><div n="1" type="textpart" subtype="chapter"><div n="16" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Suppose that we are complaining that our client has been beaten. We must
                            first speak of the act itself; we shall then proceed to point out that
                            the victim was an old man, a child, a magistrate, an honest man or a
                            benefactor to the state; we shall also point out that the assailant was
                            a worthless and contemptible fellow, or (to take the opposite case) was
                            in a position of excessive power or was the last man who should have
                            given the blow, or again that the occasion was a solemn festival, or
                            that the act was committed at a time when such crimes were punished with
                            special severity by the courts or when public order was at a dangerously
                            low ebb. Again the hatred excited by the act will be enhanced if it was
                            committed in the theatre, in a temple, or at a public assembly, </p></div><div n="17" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> and if the blow was given not in mistake or in a moment of passion or,
                            if it was the result of passion which was quite unjustifiable, being due
                            to the fact that the victim had gone to the assistance of his father or
                            had made some reply or was a candidate for the same office as his
                            assailant; or finally we may hint that he wished to inflict more serious
                            injury than he succeeded in inflicting. But it is the manner of the act
                            that contributes most to the impression of its atrocity, if, for
                            example, the blow was violent or insulting: thus Demosthenes <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">in Mid.</hi>
                                72. </note> seeks to excite hatred against Midias by emphasising the
                            position of the blow, the attitude of the assailant and the expression
                            of his face. </p></div><div n="18" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> It is in this connexion that we shall have to consider whether a man was
                            killed by sword or fire or poison, by one wound or several, and <pb n="v4-6 p.395"/> whether he was slain on the spot or tortured by
                            being kept in suspense. The accuser will also frequently attempt to
                            excite pity by complaining of the fate of the man whom he is seeking to
                            avenge or of the desolation which has fallen upon his children or
                            parents. </p></div><div n="19" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> The judges may also be moved by drawing a picture of the future, of the
                            fate which awaits those who have complained of violence and wrong, if
                            they fail to secure justice. They must go into exile, give up their
                            property or endure to the end whatever their enemy may choose to inflict
                            upon them. </p></div><div n="20" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> But it will more frequently be the duty of the accuser to divert the
                            judge from all the temptations to pity which the accused will place
                            before him, and to incite him to give a strong and dispassionate
                            verdict. It will also be his duty in this connexion to forestall the
                            arguments and actions to which his opponent seems likely to have
                            recourse. For it makes the judge more cautious in observing the sanctity
                            of his oath and destroys the influence of those who are going to reply
                            to us when the arguments used by the defence have already been dealt
                            with by the prosecution, since they lose their novelty. An instance of
                            this will be found in the speech of Messala against Aufidia, <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">cp.</hi> IV.
                                ii. 106. See note prefixed to Index. 207. </note> where he warns
                            Servius Sulpicius not to talk about the peril which threatens the
                            signatories to the document and the defendant herself. Again Aesehines
                                <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">in
                                    Ctes.</hi></note> foretells the line of defence which
                            Demosthenes will pursue. There are also occasions when the judges should
                            be told what answer they should make to requests on behalf of the
                            accused, a proceeding which is a form of recapitulation. </p></div><div n="21" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> If we turn to the defendant, we must note that <pb n="v4-6 p.397"/> his
                            worth, nis manly pursuits, the scars from wounds received in battle, his
                            rank and the services rendered by his ancestors, will all commend him to
                            the goodwill of the judges. Cicero, <note anchored="true" place="unspecified">See iv. i. 69.</note> as I have already pointed
                            out, and Asinius both make use of this form of appeal: indeed they may
                            almost be regarded as rivals in this respect, since Cicero employed it
                            when defending the elder Scaurus, Asinius when defending the son. Again,
                        </p></div><div n="22" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> the cause which has brought the accused into peril may serve to produce
                            the same effect, if, for example, it appears that he has incurred enmity
                            on account of some honourable action: above all his goodness, humanity
                            or pity may be emphasised with this end in view. For it adds to the
                            apparent justice of his claim, if all that he asks of the judge is that
                            he should grant to him what he himself has granted to others. We may
                            also in this connexion lay stress on the interests of the state, the
                            glory which will accrue to the judges, the importance of the precedent
                            which their verdict will set and the place it will hold in the memory of
                            after generations. </p></div><div n="23" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> But the appeal which will carry most weight is the appeal to pity, which
                            not merely forces the judge to change his views, but even to betray his
                            emotion by tears. Such appeals to pity will be based either on the
                            previous or present sufferings of the accused, or on those which await
                            him if condemned. And the force of our appeal will be doubled if we
                            contrast the fortune which he now enjoys with that to which he will be
                            reduced, if he fail. </p></div><div n="24" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> In this connexion great play may be made by reference to the age and sex
                            of the accused, or to his nearest and dearest, that is, his children,
                            parents and kindred, all of which topics are treated in <pb n="v4-6 p.399"/> different ways. Sometimes the advocate himself may
                            even assume the role of close intimacy with his client, as Cicero does
                            in the <hi rend="italic">pro Milone,</hi>
                        <note anchored="true" place="unspecified">xxxvii. 102.</note> where he cries: <quote>
                                Alas, unhappy that I am! Alas, my unfortunate friend! You succeeded
                                by the agency of those who are now your judges in recalling me to my
                                native land, and cannot I through the same agency retain you in
                                yours? </quote> Such a method is especially serviceable when, as was
                            the case with Milo, entreaty is not in keeping with the character of the
                            accused. </p></div><div n="25" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Who would have endured to hear Milo pleading for his life, when he
                            admitted that he had killed a man of noble birth because it was his duty
                            to do so? Consequently Cicero sought to win the judges' goodwill for
                            Milo by emphasising the staunchness of his character, and himself
                            assumed the role of suppliant. Impersonation may also be employed with
                            profit in such passages, and by impersonations I mean fictitious
                            speeches supposed to be uttered, such as an advocate puts into the mouth
                            of his client. The bare facts are no doubt moving in themselves; but
                            when we pretend that the persons concerned themselves are speaking, the
                            personal note adds to the emotional effect. </p></div><div n="26" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> For then the judge seems no longer to be listening to a voice bewailing
                            another's ills, but to hear the voice and feelings of the unhappy
                            victims, men whose appearance alone would call forth his tears even
                            though they uttered never a word. And as their plea would awaken yet
                            greater pity if they urged it with their own lips, so it is rendered to
                            some extent all the more effective when it is, as it were, put into
                            their mouth by their advocate: we may draw a parallel from the stage,
                                <pb n="v4-6 p.401"/> where the actor's voice and delivery produce
                            greater emotional effect when he is speaking in an assumed role than
                            when he speaks in his own character. Consequently Cicero, to quote him
                            once again, </p></div><div n="27" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> although he will not put entreaties into Milo's mouth, and prefers to
                            commend him by his staunchness of character, still lends him words in
                            the form of such complaint as may become a brave man. <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">pro Mil.</hi>
                                xxxiv. 94. </note>
                        <quote>Alas!</quote> he says, <quote><hi rend="italic">my</hi> labours have been in vain! Alas for my
                                blighted hopes! Alas for my baffled purpose! </quote> Appeals to
                            pity should, however, always be brief, and there is good reason for the
                            saying that nothing dries so quickly as tears. <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"> A quotation from the rhetorician Apollonius,
                                    <hi rend="italic">cp.</hi> Cic. <hi rend="italic">de. Inv.</hi>
                                i. 56. </note>
                     </p></div><div n="28" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Time assuages even genuine grief, and it is therefore inevitable that
                            the semblance of grief portrayed in our speech should vanish yet more
                            rapidly. And if we spend too much time over such portrayal our hearer
                            grows weary of his tears, takes a breathing space, and returns once more
                            to the rational attitude from which lie has been distracted by the
                            impulse of the moment. </p></div><div n="29" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> We must not, therefore, allow the effect which we have produced to fall
                            flat, and must consequently abandon our appeal to the emotion just when
                            that emotion is at its height, nor must we expect anyone to weep for
                            long over another's ills. For this reason our eloquence ought to be
                            pitched higher in this portion of our speech than in any other, since,
                            wherever it fails to add something to what has preceded, it seems even
                            to diminish its previous effect, while a <hi rend="italic">diminuendo</hi> is merely a step towards the rapid disappearance of
                            the emotion. </p></div><div n="30" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Actions as well as words may be employed to move the court to tears.
                            Hence the custom of <pb n="v4-6 p.403"/> bringing accused persons into
                            court wearing squalid and unkempt attire, and of introducing their
                            children and parents, and it is with this in view that we see
                            blood-stained swords, fragments of bone taken from the wound, and
                            garments spotted with blood, displayed by the accusers, wounds stripped
                            of their dressings, and scourged bodies bared to view. </p></div><div n="31" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> The impression produced by such exhibitions is generally enormous, since
                            they seem to bring the spectators face to face with the cruel facts. For
                            example, the sight of the bloodstains on the purple-bordered toga of
                            Gaius Caesar, which was carried at the head of his funeral procession,
                            aroused the Roman people to fury. They knew that he had been killed;
                            they had even seen his body stretched upon the bier: but his garment,
                            still wet with his blood, brought such a vivid image of the crime before
                            their minds, that Caesar seemed not to have been murdered, but to be
                            being murdered before their very eyes. </p></div><div n="32" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Still I would not for this reason go so far as to approve a practice of
                            which I have read, and which indeed I have occasionally witnessed, of
                            bringing into court a picture of the crime painted on wood or canvas,
                            that the judge might be stirred to fury by the horror of the sight. For
                            the pleader who prefers a voiceless picture to speak for him in place of
                            his own eloquence must be singularly incompetent. </p></div><div n="33" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> On the other hand, I know that the wearing of mourning and the
                            presentation of an unkempt appearance, and the introduction of relatives
                            similarly arrayed, has proved of value, and that entreaties have been of
                            great service to save the accused from condemnation. The practice
                            therefore of appealing to the judges by all that is near and dear to
                            them will be <pb n="v4-6 p.405"/> of great service to the accused,
                            especially if he, too, has children, a wife and parents. </p></div><div n="34" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Invocation of the gods, again, usually gives the impression that the
                            speaker is conscious of the justice of his cause, while it may produce a
                            good effect if the accused throws himself on the ground and embraces the
                            knees of the judges, unless his character, his past life and station
                            prohibit a resort to this device: for there are some acts which require
                            to be defended with no less boldness than was required for their
                            commission. But we must take care not to carry matters with too high a
                            hand, for fear of creating a bad impression by an appearance of
                            over-confidence. <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">i.e.</hi> although such entreaties are effective,
                                they cannot always be employed. Thus they would have been out of
                                place in the case of Milo, whose character was such that it was
                                necessary to defend him with a boldness worthy of the boldness
                                required to perform the deed of which he was accused. Still we must
                                not carry such methods ( <hi rend="italic">e.g.</hi> such as Cicero
                                employs on behalf of Milo) too far. </note>
                     </p></div><div n="35" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> The most effective of all such methods was in times past that by which
                            more than anything else Cicero is considered to have saved Lucius Murena
                                <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">pro
                                    Mur.</hi> xxxvii. 79. </note> from the attacks of his accusers,
                            who were men of the greatest distinction. For he persuaded the court
                            that nothing was more necessary in view of the critical position of
                            affairs than that Murena should assume the consulship on the
                            thirty-first of December. This form of appeal is now, however, almost
                            entirely obsolete, since the safety of the state is to-day dependent on
                            the watchful care of a single ruler, and cannot conceivably be
                            imperilled by the result of a trial. </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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