Bibliotheca Sacra and Theological Review, Volume 5Allen, Morrill, and Wardwell, 1848 |
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Pagina 26
... Cicero's style ; in reality , however , they are not so , any more than possibile and possibilitas which too were unknown to Cicero ; they are rather the creations of a new mind ; but we must not imagine them to be Latin . During the ...
... Cicero's style ; in reality , however , they are not so , any more than possibile and possibilitas which too were unknown to Cicero ; they are rather the creations of a new mind ; but we must not imagine them to be Latin . During the ...
Pagina 33
... Cicero and other great classical wri- ters , who had borrowed terms from the Greek . The fundamental error of this mischievous and detrimental idea is so apparent , that we wonder how it could be long adopted and followed . We shall ...
... Cicero and other great classical wri- ters , who had borrowed terms from the Greek . The fundamental error of this mischievous and detrimental idea is so apparent , that we wonder how it could be long adopted and followed . We shall ...
Pagina 35
... or refute them , according as they may merit . Those who oppose ancient literature on the ground that they can- not learn from Homer and Virgil how to bake bread and to salt meat , nor from Cicero how to dye a blue without indigo.
... or refute them , according as they may merit . Those who oppose ancient literature on the ground that they can- not learn from Homer and Virgil how to bake bread and to salt meat , nor from Cicero how to dye a blue without indigo.
Pagina 36
nor from Cicero how to dye a blue without indigo , we may reasona- bly set aside . They are perhaps modest enough , even in this immod- est age , not to expect an answer ; should they wish one , they must look elsewhere for it . Many ...
nor from Cicero how to dye a blue without indigo , we may reasona- bly set aside . They are perhaps modest enough , even in this immod- est age , not to expect an answer ; should they wish one , they must look elsewhere for it . Many ...
Pagina 37
... Cicero's writings in imitation of the Greeks are his faultiest , and the odes of Horace are for the same rea- son the worst of his poems . In the second place , the number of the modern classics trained after the philological fashion of ...
... Cicero's writings in imitation of the Greeks are his faultiest , and the odes of Horace are for the same rea- son the worst of his poems . In the second place , the number of the modern classics trained after the philological fashion of ...
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