[17]
You have heard what was the origin of the bad feeling
between him and his mother; when you know the rest, you will perceive that I feared this with
reference to our care; for, I am not ignorant that, whatever sort of woman a mother may be,
still in a trial in which her son is concerned, it is scarcely fitting that any mention should
be made of the infamy of his mother. I should not, O judges, be fit to con duct any cause, if,
when I was employed in warding off danger from a friend, I were to fail to see this which is
implanted and deeply rooted in the common feelings of all men, and in their very nature. I am
quite aware, that it is right for men not only to be silent about the injuries which they
suffer from their parents, but even to bear them with equanimity; but I think that those
things which can be borne ought to be borne, that those things which can be buried in silence
ought to be buried in silence.
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