Institutio Oratoria
Quintilian
Quintilian. Institutio Oratoria, Volume 1-4. Butler, Harold Edgeworth, translator. Cambridge, Mass; London: Harvard University Press, William Heinemann Ltd., 1920-1922.
Or we may admit the judges to our deliberations, a device which is frequently called into play. We may say,
What do you advise?or,
I ask you,or,
What, then, should have been done?Cato, for example, says,
Come now, if you had been in his place, what else would you have done?And in another passage,
Imagine this to be a matter which concerns us all, and assume you have been placed in charge of the whole affair.
Sometimes, however, in such forms of communication we may add something unexpected, a device which is in itself a figure, as Cicero does in the Verrines:
What then? What think you? Perhaps you expect to hear of some theft or plunder.[*](v. 5. 10.) Then, after keeping the minds of the judges in suspense for a considerable time, he adds something much worse. This figure is termed suspension by Celsus. It has two forms.
For we may adopt exactly the opposite procedure to that just mentioned, and after raising expectation of a sequel of the most serious nature, we may drop to something which is of a trivial character, and may even imply no offence at all. But since this does not necessarily involve any form of communication, some have given it the name of paradox or surprise.
I do not agree with those who extend the name of figure to a statement that something has happened unexpectedly to the
Gentlemen, I never thought it would come to pass that, when Scaurus was the accused, I should have to entreat you not to allow influence to carry any weight on his behalf.
The figure known as concession springs from practically the same source as communication; it occurs when we leave some things to the judgment of the jury, or even in some cases of our opponents, as when Calvus says to Vatinius,
Summon all your assurance and assert that you have a better claim than Cato to be elected praetor.
The figures best adapted for intensifying emotion consist chiefly in simulation. For we may feign that we are angry, glad, afraid, filled with wonder, grief or indignation, or that we wish something, and so on. Hence we get passages like the following:
I am free, I breathe again,[*](pro Mil. xviii. 47. ) or,
It is well,or,
What madness is this?[*](pro Muren. vi. 14. ) or,
Alas! for these degenerate days or,
Woe is me; for though all my tears are shed my grief still clings to me deep-rooted in my heart,[*](Phil.. xxvi. 64. ) or,
To this some give the name of exclamation,Unknown.
- Gape now, wide earth.
and include it among figures of speech. When, however, such exclamations are genuine, they do not come under the head of our present topic: it is only those which are simulated and artfully designed which can with any certainty be regarded as figures. The same is true of free speech, which Corificius [*]( The author of Auct. ad Herennium, iv. 36. ) calls licence, and the Greeks παῤῥησία. For what has less of the figure about it than true freedom? On the other hand, freedom of speech may frequently be made a