[9]
Both parties as a general rule may likewise employ the appeal to the emotions, but they will
appeal to different emotions and the defender will
employ such appeals with greater frequency and
fulness. For the accuser has to rouse the judge,
while the defender has to soften him. Still even
the accuser will sometimes make his audience weep
by the pity excited for the man whose wrongs he
seeks to avenge, while the defendant will at times
develop no small vehemence when he complains of
the injustice of the calumny or conspiracy of which
[p. 389]
he is the victim. It will therefore be best to treat
these duties separately: as I have already said,1 they
are much the same in the peroration as in the
exordium, but are freer and wider in scope in the
former.
1 IV. i. 27, 28.
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