pervaded the whole of Roman life. Every ordinary
man was morally bound to keep an account-book of his
income and expenditure—in every well-arranged
house, accordingly, there was a separate account-chamber
(-tablinum-)—and every one took care that
he should not leave the world without having made his
will: it was one of the three matters in his
life which Cato declares that he regretted, that he
had been a single day without a testament. Those
household books were universally by Roman usage admitted
as valid evidence in a court of justice, nearly in
the same way as we admit the evidence of a merchant’s
ledger. The word of a man of unstained repute
was admissible not merely against himself, but also
in his own favour; nothing was more common than to
settle differences between persons of integrity by
means of an oath demanded by the one party and taken
by the other—a mode of settlement which
was reckoned valid even in law; and a traditional
rule enjoined the jury, in the absence of evidence,
to give their verdict in the first instance for the
man of unstained character when opposed to one who
was less reputable, and only in the event of both
parties being of equal repute to give it in favour
of the defendant.(25) The conventional respectability
of the Romans was especially apparent in the more and
more strict enforcement of the rule, that no respectable
man should allow himself to be paid for the performance
of personal services. Accordingly, magistrates,
officers, jurymen, guardians, and generally all respectable
men entrusted with public functions, received no other
recompense for the services which they rendered than,
at most, compensation for their outlays; and not only
so, but the services which acquaintances (-amici-)
rendered to each other—such as giving security,
representation in lawsuits, custody (-depositum-),
lending the use of objects not intended to be let
on hire (-commodatum-), the managing and attending
to business in general (-procuratio-)—were
treated according to the same principle, so that it
was unseemly to receive any compensation for them
and an action was not allowable even where a compensation
had been promised. How entirely the man was
merged in the merchant, appears most distinctly perhaps
in the substitution of a money-payment and an action
at law for the duel —even for the political
duel—in the Roman life of this period.
The usual form of settling questions of personal honour
was this: a wager was laid between the offender
and the party offended as to the truth or falsehood
of the offensive assertion, and under the shape of
an action for the stake the question of fact was submitted
in due form of law to a jury; the acceptance of such
a wager when offered by the offended or offending
party was, just like the acceptance of a challenge
to a duel at the present day, left open in law, but
was often in point of honour not to be avoided.
Associations