THE ART OF CROSS-EXAMINATION
Witness (hesitating). "What?"
Counsel. "Were the occurrences of the hospital fresh in your mind at the time?"
Witness. "Well, not any fresher then than they are now."
Counsel. "As fresh as now?"
Witness. "Yes, sir."
Counsel (pausing, looking among his papers, selecting one and walking up to the witness, handing it to him). "Take this affidavit, made that Friday night, and sold to the World; show me where there is a word in it about Davis having strangled the Frenchman with a sheet, the way you have described it here to-day to this jury."
Witness (refusing paper). "No, I don't think that it is there. It is not necessary for me to look it over."
Counsel (shouting). "Don't think! You know that it is there, do you not?"
Witness (nervously). "Yes, sir; it is not there."
Counsel. "Had you forgotten it when you made that affidavit?"
Witness. "Yes, sir."
Counsel (loudly). "You had forgotten it, although only three days before you had seen a man strangled in your presence, with a sheet twisted around his throat, and had seen him fall lifeless upon the floor; you had forgotten it when you described the incident and made the affidavit about it to the World?"
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