[14]
Yet it would be unanimously agreed, I think, that the laws which deal with cases such as the present are the most admirable and righteous of all laws. Not only have they the distinction of being the oldest in this country, but they have changed no more than the crime with which they are concerned; and that is the surest token of good laws, as time and experience show mankind what is imperfect. Hence you must not use the speech for the prosecution to discover whether your laws are good or bad: you must use the laws to discover whether or not the speech for the prosecution is giving you a correct and lawful interpretation of the case.1
1 This paragraph reappears in Antiph. 6.2 (cf. 87-89 and Antiph. 6.3-4). The employment of such loci communes was frequent, and there is no reason to suspect the genuineness of the present passage.