Dialogus de oratoribusGinn, 1894 - 447 sider |
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Side xxiii
... eloquence , in order to prove the purely relative meaning of the term ' antiqui ' and the consequent injustice of its persistent appli- cation to the orators of the Roman Republic , draws the attention of his hearers to the fact that ...
... eloquence , in order to prove the purely relative meaning of the term ' antiqui ' and the consequent injustice of its persistent appli- cation to the orators of the Roman Republic , draws the attention of his hearers to the fact that ...
Side xxvii
... eloquence would readily have suggested itself to a youth of 27 , even granting that he possessed the requisite intellectual maturity to grapple with it . Nor is it at all probable that Fabius Iustus , who cannot have been much more than ...
... eloquence would readily have suggested itself to a youth of 27 , even granting that he possessed the requisite intellectual maturity to grapple with it . Nor is it at all probable that Fabius Iustus , who cannot have been much more than ...
Side xxxiii
... eloquence , I con- tend , belongs to the same category of burning issues as those just enumerated . The identical ... eloquent testimony to this fact . He does , indeed , preach a return to the classic model of Cicero to counteract ...
... eloquence , I con- tend , belongs to the same category of burning issues as those just enumerated . The identical ... eloquent testimony to this fact . He does , indeed , preach a return to the classic model of Cicero to counteract ...
Side xxxiv
... eloquence . Without this conviction , the Institutio could never have been penned . Again , if the problem of the decline of eloquence had still been a living issue at the close of the 1st cen- tury , where should we have come upon ...
... eloquence . Without this conviction , the Institutio could never have been penned . Again , if the problem of the decline of eloquence had still been a living issue at the close of the 1st cen- tury , where should we have come upon ...
Side xxxviii
... eloquence and to some of the salient features of Secundus ' argument prove conclusively that the poet - advocate must be re- garded as the chief exponent of the writer's personal convictions , much in the same way as the Crassus of the ...
... eloquence and to some of the salient features of Secundus ' argument prove conclusively that the poet - advocate must be re- garded as the chief exponent of the writer's personal convictions , much in the same way as the Crassus of the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
according also Andresen Aper Aper's author Baehrens Brut characteristic Cicero Cicero's cited clause collocation common Dial Dialogus discussion e. g. Cic ellipsis eloquence eloquentiae elsewhere emendation especially examples fact first following found frequent frequently general generally Germania given great Greek Halm instances John later Latin less Lipsius Livy made Maternus meaning meditatio Messalla neque Nero never Nipp notes occurs omnibus only orat orator oratorical other passage perhaps Peter phrase place Plin Pliny possible preceding present probably question Quint Quintilian rare reading reasons rhetorical saeculum same Secundus see note seems Seneca sense similar sine speaker speech speeches statement Stil style stylistic Suet Suetonius Tacitean Taciti Tacitus taken thought time treatise usage used Vahlen Varro very view Woelfflin word words works writers writings years δὲ καὶ τῶν
Populære passager
Side 129 - Excudent alii spirantia mollius aera, credo equidem, vivos ducent de marmore vultus, orabunt causas melius, caelique meatus describent radio et surgentia sidera dicent: 850 tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento; hae tibi erunt artes; pacisque imponere morem, parcere subiectis et debellare superbos.
Side 327 - Latinos rhetoras; ibi homines adulescentulos dies totos desidere. Maiores nostri quae liberos suos discere et quos in ludos itare vellent instituerunt. Haec nova, quae praeter consuetudinem ac morem maiorum fiunt, neque placent neque recta videntur.
Side 149 - Aurea prima sata est aetas, quae vindice nullo, sponte sua, sine lege fidem rectumque colebat.
Side 287 - ... studium favorque transibit, et repente agitatores illos, equos illos, quos procul noscitant, quorum clamitant nomina, relinquent. Tanta gratia, tanta auctoritas in una vilissima...
Side 226 - Duo autem genera maxime cavenda pueris puto: unum. ne'quis eos antiquitatis nimius admirator in Gracchorum Catonisque et aliorum similium lectione durescere velit; fient enim horridi atque ieiuni...
Side xxxvii - Si inmensum imperii corpus stare ac librari sine rectore posset, dignus eram a quo res publica inciperet: nunc eo necessitatis iam pridem ventum est, ut nec mea senectus conferre plus populo Romano possit quam bonum successorem, nee tua plus iuventa quam bonum principem.
Side liii - ... narrat haec, sed aliter; huic pleraque humilia et sordida et ex medio petita, illi omnia recondita, splendida, excelsa conveniunt; hanc saepius ossa, musculi, nervi, illam tori qui dam 10 et quasi iubae decent ; haec vel maxime vi, amaritudine, instantia, illa tractu et suavitate atque etiam dulcedine placet; postremo alia verba, alius sonus, alia constructio.
Side 294 - Ac mea quidem sententia nemo poterit esse omni laude cumulatus orator, nisi erit omnium rerum magnarum atque artium scientiam consecutus.
Side 151 - O mihi turn longae maneat pars ultima vitae, spiritus et quantum sat erit tua dicere facta : non me carminibus vincet nee Thracius Orpheus, 55 nee Linus, huic mater quamvis atque huic pater adsit, Orphei Calliopea, Lino formosus Apollo.
Side 196 - CAELIO et praecipue in accusando multa urbanitas, dignusque vir, cui et mens melior et vita longior contigisset. Inveni qui CALVUM praeferrent omnibus, inveni qui Ciceroni crederent eum nimia contra se calumnia verum sanguinem perdidisse ; sed est et sancta et gravis oratio et castigata et frequenter vehemens quoque.