[79]
“No,” said
I. “But what is that to the purpose?” “In
truth,” said he, “that is what the cause turns upon.”
“How so?” He then explains to me an affair of that sort, and at the
same time an action of Sextus Naevius, which, if that alone were alleged, ought to be
sufficient. And I beg of you, O Caius Aquillius, and of you the assessors, that you will
attend to it carefully. You will see, in truth, that on the one side there were engaged
from the very beginning covetousness and audacity, that on the other side truth and
modesty resisted as long as they could. You demand to be allowed to take possession of
his goods according to the edict. On what day I wish to hear you yourself, O Naevius. I
want this unheard-of action to be proved by the voice of the very man who has committed
it. Mention the day, Naevius. The twentieth of February. Right, how far is it from hence
to your estate in Gaul? I ask you, Naevius.
Seven hundred miles. Very well: Quinctius is driven off the estate. On what day? May we
hear this also from you? Why are you silent? Tell me the day, I say.—He is
ashamed to speak it. I understand; but he is ashamed too late, and to no purpose. He is
driven off the estate on the twenty-third of February, O Caius Aquillius. Two days
afterwards, or, even if any one had set off and run the moment he left the court, in
under three days, he accomplishes seven hundred miles.
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