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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 100 — On the Writings of Fabianus (§12)

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I do not doubt that his writings are of the kind I have described, although I am harking back to him rather than retaining a sure memory of him, and although the general tone of his writings remains in my mind, not from a careful and recent perusal, but in outline, as is natural after an acquaintance of long ago. But certainly, whenever I heard him lecture, such did his work seem to me—not solid but full, the kind which would inspire young men of promise and rouse their ambition to become like him, without making them hopeless of surpassing him; and this method of encouragement seems to me the most helpful of all.
Seneca·Letter 100 — On the Writings of Fabianus (§12)·trans. Gummere
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