The Essays, vol 7
The Essays, vol 7
Translated by Charles Cotton, Edited by William Carew Hazlitt.
Book Excerpt
labours and lucubrations. Was it not very well becoming two
consuls of Rome, sovereign magistrates of the republic that commanded the
world, to spend their leisure in contriving quaint and elegant missives,
thence to gain the reputation of being versed in their own mother-
tongues? What could a pitiful schoolmaster have done worse, whose trade
it was thereby to get his living? If the acts of Xenophon and Caesar had
not far transcended their eloquence, I scarce believe they would ever
have taken the pains to have written them; they made it their business to
recommend not their speaking, but their doing. And could the perfection
of eloquence have added a lustre suitable to a great personage, certainly
Scipio and Laelius had never resigned the honour of their comedies, with
all the luxuriances and elegances of the Latin tongue, to an African
slave; for that the work was theirs, its beauty and excellence
sufficiently declare; Terence himself confesses as much, and I should
take it ill from any one that would
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