[55]
I will adopt
this course, not an unprecedented one, but one that has been adopted before, by
those who are now the chief men of our state,—the course, I mean, of at
once producing the witnesses. What you will find novel, O judges, is this, that I
will so marshal my witnesses as to unfold the whole of my accusation; that when I
have established it by examining my witnesses, by arguments, and by my speech, then
I shall show the agreement of the evidence with my accusation: so that there shall
be no difference between the established mode of prosecuting, and this new one,
except that, according to the established mode, when everything has been said which
is to be said, then the witnesses are produced; here they shall be produced as each
count is brought forward; so that the other side shall have the same opportunity of
examining them, of arguing and making speeches or their evidence. If there be any
one who prefers an uninterrupted speech and the old mode of conducting a prosecution
without any break, he shall have it in some other trial. But for this time let him
understand that what we do is done by us on compulsion, (for we only do it with the
design of opposing the artifice of the opposite party by our prudence.)
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text Ver.
actio 2
M. Tullius Cicero. The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, literally translated by C. D. Yonge. London. George Bell & Sons. 1903.
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