AESCHINES
AGAINST CTESIPHON; OR, ON THE CROWN[1]
(330 B.C.)
Born in 389 B.C., died in 314; served in several military campaigns; twice an envoy to Philip of Macedon; long the political antagonist of Demosthenes; after his defeat by Demosthenes, in the trial of Ctesiphon, went into exile.
You see, Athenians! what forces are prepared, what numbers formed and arrayed, what soliciting through the assembly, by a certain party; and all this to oppose the fair and ordinary course of justice in the state. As to me, I stand here in firm reliance, first on the immortal gods, next on the laws and you, convinced that faction never can have greater weight with you than law and justice.
It were to be wished, indeed, that the presidents of our senate and of our popular assembly would attend with due care to the order of their debates; that the laws ordained by Solon to secure the decency of public speaking might still preserve their force; that so our elder citizens might first arise in due and decent form (as these laws direct), without tumult or confusion, and each declare in order the salutary counsels
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- ↑ Delivered in Athens 330 B.C. Translated by Thomas Leland. Abridged.