<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi007.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="21" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/><gap reason="lost"/>But the Gauls deny this. But the circumstances of the case and the force of
    arguments prove it. Can then a judge refuse belief to witnesses? He not only can, but he ought,
    if they are covetous men, or angry men, or conspirators, or men utterly void of religion and
    conscience. In fact, if Marcus Fonteius is to be considered guilty just because the Gauls say
    so, what need have I of a wise judge? what need have I of an impartial judge? what need is there
    of an intelligent advocate? For the Gauls say so. We cannot deny it. If you think this is the
    duty of an able and experienced and impartial judge, that he must without the slightest
    hesitation believe a thing because the witnesses say it; then the Goddess of Safety herself
    cannot protect the innocence of brave men. But if, in coming to a decision on such matters, the
    wisdom of the judge has a wide field for its exercise in considering every circumstance, and in
    weighing each according to its importance, then in truth your part in considering the case is a
    more important and serious one than mine is in stating it. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="22" resp="perseus"><p>
    For I have only to question the witness as to each circumstance once, and that, too, briefly,
    and often indeed I have not to question him at all; lest I should seem to be giving an angry man
    an opportunity of making a speech, or to be attributing an undue weight to a covetous man. You
    can revolve the same matter over and over again in your minds, you can give a long consideration
    to the evidence of one witness; and, if we have shown an unwillingness to examine any witness,
    you are bound to consider what has been our reason for keeping silence. Wherefore; if you think
    that to believe the witnesses implicitly is enjoined to a judge, either by the law or by his
    duty, there is no reason at all why one man should be thought a better or a wiser judge than
    another. For judgment formed by the mere ears is single and simple enough; it is a power given
    promiscuously to all in common, whether they are fools or wise men. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="23" resp="perseus"><p> What, then, are the opportunities which wisdom has of distinguishing itself?
    When can a foolish and credulous auditor be distinguished from a scrupulous and discerning
    judge? When, forsooth, the statements which are made by the witnesses are committed to his
    conjectures, to his opinion, as to the authority, the impartiality of mind, the modesty; the
    good faith, the scrupulousness, the regard for a fair reputation, the care, and the fear with
    which they are made. <milestone n="11" unit="chapter"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>Or will you, in the case of the testimonies of barbarians, hesitate to do what very often
    within our recollection and that of our fathers, the wisest judges have not thought that they
    ought to hesitate to do with respect to the most illustrious men of our state? For they refused
    belief to the evidence of Cnaeus and Quintus Caepio, and to Lucius and Quintus Metellus, when
    they were witnesses against Quintus Pompeius, a new man; for virtuous, and noble, and valiant as
    they were, still the suspicion of some private object to be gamed, and some private grudge to be
    gratified, detracted from their credibility and authority as witnesses. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="24" resp="perseus"><p> Have we seen any man, can we with truth speak of any man, as having been equal
    in wisdom, in dignity, in consistency, in all other virtues, in all the distinguishing qualities
    of honour, and genius, and splendid achievements, to Marcus Aemilius Scaurus? And yet, though,
    when he was not on his oath, almost the whole world was governed by his nod, yet, when he was on
    his oath, his evidence was not believed against Caius Fimbria, nor against Caius Memmius. They,
    who were the judges, were unwilling that such a road should be opened to enmities, as for every
    man to be able to destroy by his evidence who ever he hated. Who is there who does not know how
    great was the modesty, how great the abilities, how great the influence of Lucius Crassus? And
    yet he, whose mere conversation had the authority of evidence, could not, by his actual
    evidence, establish the things which he had stated against Marcus Marcellus with hostile
    feelings. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="25" resp="perseus"><p> There was—there was in the judges of those times, O
    judges, a divinely-inspired and singular acuteness, as they thought that they were judges, not
    only of the defendant, but also of the accuser and of the witness, as to what was invented, what
    was brought into the case by chance or by the opportunity, what was imported into it through
    corruption, what was distorted by hope or by fear, what appeared to proceed from any private
    desire, or any private enmity. And if the judge does not embrace all these considerations in his
    deliberation, if he does not survey and comprehend them all in his mind,—if he thinks that
    whatever is said from that witness-box, proceeds from some oracle, then in truth it will be
    sufficient, as I have said before, for any judge to preside over this court, and to discharge
    this duty, who is not deaf. There will be no reason in the world for requiring any one, whoever
    he may be, to be either able or experienced, to qualify him for judging causes. <milestone n="12" unit="chapter"/></p></div></div></body></text></TEI>