<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi1002.phi001.perseus-eng2:12.10.79-12.11.9</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi1002.phi001.perseus-eng2:12.10.79-12.11.9</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1002.phi001.perseus-eng2" type="translation" xml:lang="eng"><div n="12" type="textpart" subtype="book"><div n="10" type="textpart" subtype="chapter"><div n="79" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> And if by perseverance of study he pass even beyond these gentler
                            slopes, fruits for which none have toiled thrust themselves upon him,
                            and all things spring forth unbidden; and yet if they be not gathered
                            daily, they will wither away. But even such wealth must observe the
                            mean, without which nothing is either praiseworthy or beneficial, while
                            brilliance must be attended by manliness, and imagination by soundness
                            of taste. </p></div><div n="80" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Thus the works of the orator will be great not extravagant, sublime not
                            bombastic, bold not rash, severe but not gloomy, grave but not slow,
                            rich but not luxuriant, pleasing but not effeminate, grand but not
                            grandiose. It is the same with other qualities: the mean is safest, for
                            the worst of all faults is to fly to extremes. </p></div></div><div n="11" type="textpart" subtype="chapter"><div n="1" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> After employing these gifts of eloquence in the courts, in councils, in
                            public assemblies and the debates of the senate, and, in a word, in the
                            performance of all the duties of a good citizen, the orator will bring
                            his activities to a close in a manner worthy of a blameless life spent
                            in the pursuit of the noblest of professions. And he will do this, not
                            because he can ever have enough of doing good, <pb n="v10-12 p.497"/> or
                            because one endowed with intellect and talents such as his would not be
                            justified in praying that such glorious labours may be prolonged to
                            their utmost span, but for this reason, that it is his duty to look to
                            the future, for fear that his work may be less effective than it has
                            been in the past. </p></div><div n="2" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> For the orator depends not merely on his knowledge, which increases with
                            the years, but on his voice, lungs and powers of endurance. And if these
                            be broken or impaired by age or health, he must beware that he does not
                            fall short in something of his high reputation as a master of oratory,
                            that fatigue does not interrupt his eloquence, that he is not brought to
                            realise that some of his words are inaudible, or to mourn that he is not
                            what once he was. </p></div><div n="3" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> Domitius Afer was by far the greatest of all the orators whom it has
                            been my good fortune to know, and I saw him, when far advanced in years,
                            daily losing something of that authority which his merits had won for
                            him; he whose supremacy in the courts had once been universally
                            acknowledged, now pleaded amid the unworthy laughter of some, and the
                            silent blushes of others, giving occasion to the malicious saying that
                            he had rather <quote>faint than finish.</quote>
                        <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"> By <quote>finish</quote> is meant <quote>retire
                                    from pleading.</quote>
                        </note>
                     </p></div><div n="4" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> And yet even then, whatever his deficiencies, he spoke not badly, but
                            merely less well. Therefore before ever he fall a prey to the ambush
                            where time lies in wait for him, the orator should sound the retreat and
                            seek harbour while his ship is yet intact. For the fruits of his studies
                            will not be lessened by retirement. Either he will bequeath the history
                            of his own times for the delight of after ages, or will interpret the
                            law to those who seek his counsels, as Lucius Crassus proposes <pb n="v10-12 p.499"/> to do in the <hi rend="italic">de Oratore</hi>
                        <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">de</hi> ( <hi rend="italic">Or.</hi> I. xlii. 190. </note> of Cicero, or
                            compose some treatise on the art of oratory, or give worthy utterance to
                            the sublimest ideals of conduct. </p></div><div n="5" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> His house will, as in the days of old, be thronged by all the best of
                            the rising generation, who will seek to learn from him as from an oracle
                            how they may find the path to true eloquence. And he as their father in
                            the art will mould them to all excellence, and like some old pilot will
                            teach them of the shores whereby their ships must sail, of the harbours
                            where they may shelter, and the signs of the weather, and will expound
                            to them what they shall do when the breeze is fair or the tempest blows.
                            Whereto he will be inclined not only by the common duty of humanity, but
                            by a certain passion for the task that once was his, since no man
                            desires that the art wherein he was once supreme should suffer decay or
                            diminution. </p></div><div n="6" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> And what can be more honourable than to teach that which you know
                            surpassing well? It was for this that the elder Caelius brought his son
                            to Cicero, as the latter <note anchored="true" place="unspecified"><hi rend="italic">pro Cael.</hi> iv. 10. </note> tells us, and it
                            was with this intent that the same great orator took upon himself the
                            duties of instructor, and trained Pansa, Hirtius and Dolabella by
                            declaiming daily before them or hearing them declaim. </p></div><div n="7" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> And I know not whether we should not deem it the happiest moment in an
                            orator's life, when he has retired from the public gaze, the consecrated
                            priest of eloquence, free from envy and far from strife, when he has set
                            his glory on a pinnacle beyond the reach of detraction, enjoys, while
                            still living, that veneration which most men win but after death, and
                            sees how great shall be his renown amid generations yet unborn. </p></div><div n="8" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> I can say with a good conscience that, as far as <pb n="v10-12 p.501"/> my
                            poor powers have permitted, I have published frankly and
                            disinterestedly, for the benefit of such as might wish to learn, all
                            that my previous knowledge and the researches made for the purpose of
                            this work might supply. And to have taught what lie knows is
                            satisfaction enough for any good man. </p></div><div n="9" type="textpart" subtype="section"><p> I fear, however, that I may be regarded as setting too lofty an ideal
                            for the orator by insisting that he should be a good man skilled in
                            speaking, or as imposing too many subjects of study on the learner. For
                            in addition to the many branches of knowledge which have to be studied
                            in boyhood and the traditional rules of eloquence, I have enjoined the
                            study of morals and of civil law, so that I am afraid that even those
                            who have regarded these things as essential to my theme, may he appalled
                            at the delay which they impose and abandon all hope of achievement
                            before they have put my precepts to the test. </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
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