[Life of Cicero by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
Life of Cicero

CHAPTER XII
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As the gradual decay of a picture will be observed by the true critic, though it be not seen by the world at large, so was it with his decay.

From day to day he became more and more unlike his old self, failing in all branches of oratory, but specially in the rapidity and continuity of his words.

But for myself I never rested, struggling always to increase whatever power there was in me by practice of every kind, especially in writing.

Passing over many things in the year after I was AEdile, I will come to that in which I was elected first Praetor, to the great delight of the public generally; for I had gained the good-will of men, partly by my attention to the causes which I undertook, but specially by a certain new strain of eloquence, as excellent as it was uncommon, with which I spoke." Cicero, when he wrote this of himself, was an old man sixty-two years of age, broken hearted for the loss of his daughter, to whom it was no doubt allowed among his friends to praise himself with the garrulity of years, because it was understood that he had been unequalled in the matter of which he was speaking.

It is easy for us to laugh at his boastings; but the account which he gives of his early life, and of the manner in which he attained the excellence for which he had been celebrated, is of value.
APPENDIX C.
(_See_ ch.VI., note [117]) There was still prevailing in Rome at this time a strong feeling that a growing taste for these ornamental luxuries was injurious to the Republic, undermining its simplicity and weakening its stability.


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