University of Toronto Quarterly, Volume 4University of Toronto Press, 1934 - Canada |
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Page 245
... Seneca , on the contrary , disclaimed any special interest in the youth ; they flocked around him none the less , they admired him , they sought to imitate him . It had been most unacademic that young men , the proper object of ...
... Seneca , on the contrary , disclaimed any special interest in the youth ; they flocked around him none the less , they admired him , they sought to imitate him . It had been most unacademic that young men , the proper object of ...
Page 246
... Seneca Rhetor would hardly show less than reverence for Cicero . But that he cried down the classic writers because ... Seneca's style was unique is admitted in the statement that his young admirers fell as far short of him as did he of ...
... Seneca Rhetor would hardly show less than reverence for Cicero . But that he cried down the classic writers because ... Seneca's style was unique is admitted in the statement that his young admirers fell as far short of him as did he of ...
Page 253
... Seneca's wealth is mentioned , in such a way as to imply that we are dealing with tainted money . Seneca was born well - to - do ( always in itself a crime in some eyes ) , seems , like all his family , to have had some flair for busi ...
... Seneca's wealth is mentioned , in such a way as to imply that we are dealing with tainted money . Seneca was born well - to - do ( always in itself a crime in some eyes ) , seems , like all his family , to have had some flair for busi ...
Contents
VOLUME IV 19345 | 1 |
Shakespeare and Sophocles | 11 |
What Has Befallen Us GEORGE M WRONG | 34 |
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