In-Text |
Both These, Tully had Collected (as he professes in his Book, De Senectute) from the followers of Pythagoras, of Socrates, and Plato. These Both, he, (or the Person he makes Speaker there) repeats in his piece, De Somnio Scipionis. — Tu vero — sic habeto, Te non esse mortalem, sed corpus hoc; |
Both These, Tully had Collected (as he Professes in his Book, De Senectute) from the followers of Pythagoras, of Socrates, and Plato. These Both, he, (or the Person he makes Speaker there) repeats in his piece, De Somnio Scipio's. — Tu vero — sic habeto, Te non esse mortalem, sed corpus hoc; |
d d, np1 vhd vvn (c-acp pns31 vvz p-acp po31 n1, fw-fr fw-la) p-acp dt n2 pp-f np1, pp-f np1, cc np1. np1 av-d, pns31, (cc dt n1 pns31 vvz n1 a-acp) vvz p-acp po31 n1, fw-fr np1 np1. — fw-la fw-la — fw-la fw-la, fw-la fw-fr fw-la fw-la, fw-la fw-la fw-la; |