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Chapter 21
1. The praise,
however is too often neither reliable nor great.
2. The old men in
our nation were never neglected by sons.
3. Who had been
ordered at that time to liberate Greeks from anxiety, to
defend
families, and also to keep back enemies from the
patriot?
4. An account of
common safety he has ordered to depart those conspirators
from the city and also to lead over rivers and
to mountains.
5. The other
authors have begun to move our spirits against judgment and
also
against arguments of the senate again, which had
been terrified by all new fears.
6. All kinds of servitude are seen harsh by
us.
7. Will Cicero be carried away from the hands of
those people ?
8. Which end of fear and also of servitude can be
seen now in this state?
9. But we ought to live now good on account of
good old age.
10. There were in their family two daughters and also four
sons.
11. The house of our neighbor has had few windows through which man
can has been
able to
see.
12. When he heard the horn, the old man in the classes fell and was
announcing
the
gratitude to the immortal gods.
13. Because of the benefit and the common sense of the tyrant, few
people hate him.
14. Veritas sine labore magno non invenietur.
15. Gentes multae quae pace vera caret bellis delentur.
16. Metus eorum nunc possunt vinci qoud facta nostra ominibus
intelleguntur.
17. Nisi studia gravia nos delectant, pecuniae laudisque causa
saepe negleguntur.
SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
1. Danger is never conquered without
danger.
2. Novius is my neighbor and he can be touched by
the right hand from my windows.
3. The judges will order this men to be lead into
chain and to be snatched to death, won't they?
4. The second period of life is worn out by civil
wars and the Roma itself is destroyed by
its own
people.
5. But the friendship is not shut out from any
place; it is never untimely nor harmful.
6. Future things cannot be known.
7. At the beginning the world itself is created
on account of gods and mankinds, and which are
in those,
which has been prepared to the fruits of mankind.
8. How fully is the agriculture praised by
Xenophon in his book which is entitled "Oeconomicus"!
9. The common people want to be deceived.
10. Where are science and wisdom found?
11. The truth works too often; and is never extinguished.
VIRGIL'S MESSIANIC ECLOGUE
A great new age comes now; a boy is sent from the heaven, who has
the life of god and he will
see gods and he himself will be seen by gods.
This boy rules the world to whom the virtues of
the patriot has given the peace. A few bad men, however, will
remain, who will order people to work
and to conduct harsh war. There will be also the
other wars and Acilles will be sent to the great
Troy again. Then, the boy, when soon after long time he will have
made you of men,
there will be no labor, no war; sailors depart from ships, farmers
also abandon now fields,
the land itself will prepare everything to all
human. Run, the ages; begin, small boy, to be
born,
and the enough of your spirit will be made to me to
tell.(???)
Chapter 22
1. Our neighbors have thrown themselves into
knees immediately and have praised all gods in the
world.
2. The people of Greek were being restrained by
huge mountains and by small territories.
3. Who has ordered that republic to be liberated
from the harsh servitude ?
4. He says, "That man is removed by his own
crimes in short time."
5. The same things will be prepared again against
the other hands of bad citizens;
we defend
the republic and they depart
quickly.
6. Old age often prevents old people from the
middle of things.
7. Mind you that serious things
are carried on not by violence nor by hope but by wisdom.
8.If you neglect the verses of these two poets,
you will be deprived of the great part of
the Roman
literatures.
9. At the same time our hopes of common safety
have been supported by our faith, the spirits
have been
raised, and the fears have been abandoned.
10. New kinds of crimes are found in this city because many men
lack of now also of good death
and common
senses and even they have harmful nature.
11. The mob was throwing out many things from the windows of
houses.
12. Magna fides nunc in hac re publica inveniri potest.
13. Spes novae eius erant sublatae ab metu communi rerum
incertarum.
14. Illo die virtus fidesque fortium Romanorum hominum feminarumque
ominibus visae sunt.
15. Magna cum spe tyrannus illas naves deleri iussit.
16. Potuit se defendere cum manu neque sinistra neque dextra
eius.
SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
1. As long as the life exists, there exists
hope.
2. Keep a calm spirit in difficult things.
3. Where there is a tyrant, there is clearly no
republic.
4. Men of great virtue and ancient faiths have
been once in this republic.
5. We wish this republic to be sound.
6. The hope of conspirators is nourished by mild
feelings of many citizens.
7. The republic has been took away on that day
from fire and also from sword
by my
wisdom.
8. Because they hate war, they were working for
peace with faith.
9. Tell me with good faith: do you have not
snatched that money from his right hand?
10. A reliable friend is distinguished in uncertain thing.
11. Homer snatches the audience into the middle of the
things.
12. Happy is he who can understand the causes of things; and
fortunate is he
who loves
ancient gods.
13. A Stoic among us says, "the fault is not in things but in
spirit itself."
14. And I subject things to myself, not myself to things.
15. There is a limit in things; there are sure boundaries beyond
which virtue cannot
be
found.
16. Goddess of fortune, does this seem favorable to you?
A VISIT FROM THE YOUNG INTERNS
I was sick: but you have come immediately to me accompanied by one
hundred pupils
of Symmache.
One hundred hands chilled by north wind touched me:
I have not had fever, Symmache, now I have!
ON AMBITION AND LITERATURE, BOTH LATIN AND GREEK
The poets can give great and perpetual fame to people through
literature;
many men, therefore, desire the literature to be written about
their own
things. All of us are drawn by the pursuit of praise and many
glories are led
by those which can be found either in Greek or in Latin
literature.
Who, however, sees many fruit of glory in Latin verses but not in
Greek's, errs too
much, because the Greek literatures are read in almost all races,
but Latin
literatures are restricted in our own territory.
Chapter 23
1. I never distinguish anything before having
been heard.
2. You have not helped that orator in the middle
of the senator again who was
seeking the
end of wars and also of crimes.
3. Definite fruits of the peace were being
desired by the common people who had been
frightened
and also by the senate.
4. Which brave man will liberate the other nation
from the heavy dread of the
servitude
?
5. Anybody neglecting fidelity will never be free
from fear.
6. That lucky woman has once nourished this
wisdom against evil people and
she was
always working on account of the common safety.
7. About to oppressing the Latin people and
snatching wealth, they began immediately
to oppress
and wipe out all people of great honesty.
8. Is the fame of this doctor raised by those new
verses?
9. But a life of that favorable manner encloses
something pleasant and happy.
10. On which date have you been taken away out of fire and sword
and also
out of
definite death?
11. Multa gentibus carentibus spe dedimus.
12. Illi decem viri, vocati, magno cum studio iterum venient.
13. Per fenestram viderunt secundum senem currentem ex casa vicini
eius
et ab
urbe.
14. Ipse metu incerto oppressus est quod neque veritatem neque
libertatem cupivit.
SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
1. You will live overpowered by my guards.
2. Those people, however, extending right hands,
were seeking safety.
3. Tantalus, being thirsty, was desiring to touch
river fleeing from his mouse.
4.The signs of things being done are shown to the
world by gods.
5. The captured Greek has captured harsh victor
(Rome).
6. Attius has given much money to Cicero, fleeing
from the patriot.
7. If you will entrust him to be educated to me,
I shall begin to form the study
of him from
the child age.
8. Use the eraser often, then you are about to
write a good little book.
9. The anxiety of orator about to dictate pleases
those about to listen to.
10. By reading Platon, I always weep over the death of
Socrates.
11. The memory of life well driven and that of many things well
done is pleasant.
12. He who will live fearing, will never be free.
13. He is not miserable who does something ordered, but he is
miserable
who does
something unwillingly,
14. The word once emitted flies irrevocably.
LAOCOON SPEAKS OUT AGAINST THE TROJAN HORSE.
Oppressed by long war and by turning away gods, the leaders of
Greek, now after
10 years, make a big wooden horse with the skill of Minerva.
They fill up the uterum with many soldiers, they leave the horse in
the coast,
and they sail over the island nearby.
Trojans see no troops nor ships; all Trojans are glad; the gates
are opened.
About the horse, however, Trojans are doubtful.
Somebody desire them to be lead into the city, others speak them as
Greeks' plots.
The chief there before all people, running from the citadel,
Laocoon, a Trojan
priest, says these words: "O miserable citizens, you are not sound!
What are you
thinking ? Don't you understand the Greeks and their
plots? Either you will find
in that horse many harsh soldiers, or the horse is a machine for
war, made against us,
if going to come to the city, going to spy on our houses and
people.
Or something is hidden. Do not trust on the horse, Trojans:
whatever it is, I fear
the Greeks and also the carrying gifts!"
He has left, and he has thrown a strong spear with great power of
left hand into
the uterum of the horse; that spear has stood still, shaking.
Chapter 24
1. The fire having been seen, all men and wives
are having been frightened,
and they
have sailed over the city to the shore of the island, where
the
shelter has
been found.
2. With the people having been suppressed by
fear, that general must be driven out
by us.
3. The orator, with the signal having been given
by the priest, came back at
that day and
now all the people of Latin rejoices.
4. The Roman people has once admitted the verse
of that scripter with big praise.
5. The praises and also the gifts of this way
were being desired by orators.
6. With the supreme power having been accepted,
the brave leader has exhibited
his own
faith to the republic.
7. Someone had ordered those five horses to be
rescued from the fire afterwards.
8. Do you understand everything which you have to
know?
9. That man, coming back from the citadel of the
city, began to be pursued by those
human.
10. I wish to touch the hand of those soldiers who was lack of fear
and also who
has
oppressed heavy crimes against the republic.
11. That leader has been driven out immediately, just as he was
capturing the supreme
power.
12. Those (female) slaves, however, were seeking the shelter and
the relief from
friends.
13. With the horn having been heard, that soldier, by doubtful
judgment, has turned
the troop to
the middle of the island.
14. Periculo communi averso, duo ex nostoros filios et omnes filiae
nostrae ab Asia
revenerunt.
15. Spes nostrae non delendae sunt ab illis tribus malis.
16. Populis omnium gentium pacem quarentibus, cupiditas imperii
ducibus omnibus
superandus
est.
17. Iste dux, expulsus est ab et viris liberis et servis, imperium
eum recipiere non
poterat.
SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
1. Cartago is to be destroyed.
2. When the Asia has been conquered, the Roman
fortunate leader has sent many
slaves into
Italia.
3. Because all have been terrified by the swords
of the soldiers,
each one was
longing for guard himself.
4. Whatever must be spoken, I shall speak
freely.
5. These all wounds of the war must been healed
now by you.
6. I shall fear neither civil war nor spears of
soldier nor violent death,
if Augustus
holds the country.
7. With Tarquinus having been driven out, the
Roman people could not hear the
name of
king.
8. All wisdoms and deeds must be ruled by us for
the advantage of life.
DE CUPIDITATE
A foolish man says, "O citizens, citizens", "the money must been
strived for
against all; and the virtue and honesty after money.
The desire for money, however, must be avoided.
The desire for the glory must also be avoided;
for it takes away freedom.
Supreme powers must be always neither sought nor accepted.
Hercules, with have been accepted in heaven because of the virtue,
has greeted
the gods; but when the Pluto is coming, who is the son of the
goddess of the fortune,
Hercules has turned away his eyes. Then, with the
reason asked for, he said, "that
god", must be scorned because he corrupts everything on account of
profit.
THE SATIRIST'S MODUS OPERANDI
Laughing, I shall run through my satire, and why not ?
What forbids me to tell the truth laughing, as the teacher often
gives cookie
to the boys to be taught.
I look for the serious things from the pleasant game and, with
names having been
made up, I tell about many faults and vices. But what do you
laugh?
With the name having been changed, the story is told about
you.
Chapter 25
1. "Each one", he says, "thinks always that his
own things is great."
2. Afterwards we have heard that the slaves had
worked on account of the presents,
just as
faithful soldiers have told yesterday.
3. Our neighbors have then turned away the force
of fire with great courage,
because they
have desired the fame and also the gifts.
4. This sign of the danger will touch the total
of our nation, if we will not be
able to take
out the enemy from the city and also to drive out from Italy.
5. With the leader of fierce Carthago having been
driven out, the hope and the
fidelity of
the brave men will hold together the republic.
6. Why was pleasant Horatius always displaying
and also laughing at human faults
in satires
?
7. We believe that the ancient faith ought to be
nourished again by all nations.
8. The leader, having been sent to the senator,
has accepted the supreme power
and he has
been made to the emperor.
9. The republic, as he says, that it can be
destroyed by the books of this manner.
10. Some people deny that the conquered enemy ought ever to be
suppressed
with
servitude.
11. They believe that the wise schoolmistress will expose the
truth.
12. Whoever shall receive the truth, will be educated well.
13. Putavimus sorores vestras istas litteras scribere.
14. Demonstrabunt istas litteras a serva forti scriptas esse.
15. Dixit istas litteras numquam scriptas esse.
16. Speramus uxorem iudicis illas duas litteras cras scripturam
esse.
SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
1. He has not denied at that time that it had
been made.
2. With these things having been announced,
therefore, you have known that he
was an
enemy.
3. You think that he is now looked for by the
enemy.
4. I have seen that they have remained in the
city and with us.
5. I distinguish, therefore, that an eternal war
with bad citizens has been undertaken by me.
6. I believe that the same thing ought to be done
by you.
7. I used to know that you were truly faithful to
me.
8. With turning the enemies themselves into the
state, the senate has announced to Cincinnatus
that he has
been made to a dictator.
9. I speak to you, Pyrrhus, can conquer the
Romans.
10. Speak, stranger, to Sparta that you have seen that we were
lying here,
faithful to
the patriot.
11. Socrates was thinking that he himself was a citizen of the
whole world.
12. Those teachers deny that anyone is good even if he is not
wise.
13. I have denied, however, that the death ought to be
feared.
14. I believe that the unmortal god has scattered sprits in human
bodies.
15. A young man hopes that he will live for a long time; an old man
can