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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 114 — On Style as a Mirror of Character (§16)

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And what shall I say of that arrangement in which words are put off and, after being long waited for, just manage to come in at the end of a period? Or again of that softly-concluding style, Cicero-fashion, with a gradual and gently poised descent always the same and always with the customary arrangement of the rhythm! Nor is the fault only in the style of the sentences, if they are either petty and childish, or debasing, with more daring than modesty should allow, or if they are flowery and cloying, or if they end in emptiness, accomplishing mere sound and nothing more.
Seneca·Letter 114 — On Style as a Mirror of Character (§16)·trans. Gummere
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