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| Yet his works are filled with quotations from them. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
7. You observe
how new and terrible a form of oath this is which he describes. The
Lord Jesus Christ sits on the tribunal as judge, the angels are
assessors, and plead for him; and there, in the intervals of scourgings
and tortures, he swears that he will never again have by him the works
of heathen authors nor read them. Now look back over the work we are
dealing with, and tell me whether there is a single page of it in which
he does not again declare himself a Ciceronian, or in which he does not
speak of ‘our Tully,’ ‘our Flaccus,’ ‘our
Maro.’2943
2943 Cicero, Horace and Virgil. | As to Chrysippus and Aristides,
Empedocles and all the rest of the Greek writers, he scatters their
names around him like a vapour or halo, so as to impress his readers
with a sense of his learning and literary attainments. Amongst the
rest, he boasts of having read the books of Pythagoras. Many learned
men, indeed, declare these books to be non-extant: but he, in order
that he may illustrate every part of his vow about heathen authors,
declares that he has read even those which do not exist in writing. In
almost all his works he sets out many more and longer quotations from
these whom he calls ‘his own’ than from the Prophets and
Apostles who are ours. Even in the works which he addresses to girls
and weak women, who desire, as is right, only to be edified by teaching
out of our Scriptures, he weaves in illustrations from ‘his
own’ Flaccus and Tullius and Maro.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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