Calendar: 1868-1869 Page 469
Please note: The digitised calendars in this site have had their contents extracted using OCR (optical character recognition) and as a result, there may be occasional errors in the text. We are working on correcting these errors, but this may take some time.
Page content
THEOLOGICAL DEPARTMENT 471 inter se magnitudine et quasi gradibus non genere differrent Haec enim est non verborum parva sed rerum permagna dis- sensio Verum base alias nunc quod ccepimus si videtur Mihi vero inquit Cotta videtur Sed ut hie qui intervenit me intuens ne ignoret quae res agatur de natura agebamus deo- rum quae quum mihi videretur perobscura ut semper videri solet Epicuri ex Velleio sciscitabar sententiam Quamobrem inquit Veliei nisi mokstum est repete qute cceperas Repetam vero quamquam non mihi sed tibi hie venit adjutor Ainbo enim inquit arridens ab eodem Philone nihil scire didicistis Turn ego Quid didicerimus Cotta viderit tu autem nolo existi- mes me adjutorem huic venisse sed uditorem et quidem asquum ibero judicio nulla ejusmodi astrictum necessitate ut mihi velim nolim sit certa quaedam tuenda sententia Sed urgetis idemtidem hominum esse istam culpam non deorum ut si medicus gravitatem morbi gubernator vim tem- pestatis accuset' etsi hi quidem homunculi sed tamen ridiculi Quis enim te adhibuisset dixerit quispiam si ista non estent contra deum licet disputare liberius In hominum vitiis ais esse culpam Earn dedisses hominibus rationem quae vitia culpam- que excluderet Ubi igitur locus fuit errori deorum Nam patrimonia spe bene tradendi relinquimus qua possumus falli deus falli qui potuit An ut Sol in currum quum Phaethontem filium sustulit aut Neptunus quum Theseus Hippolytum perdi- dit quum ter optandi Neptuno patre habuisset potestatem II -Cranslati into latin man who in ordinary life is very inquisitive after everything which is spoken ill of him passes his time but very indifferently He is wounded by every arrow that is shot at him and puts it in the power of every insignificant enemy to disquiet him Nay he will suffer from what has been said of him when it is forgotten by those who said or heard it For this reason could never bear one of those officious friends that would be telling every malicious report every idle censure that passed upon me The tongue of man is so petulant and his thoughts so variable that one should not lay too great stress upon any present speeches
Further information
For further information about this page, please click here to contact us ›