Of POLITE LEARNING.
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ly in the first, is very great. Were I rich, I would send him to one of our own universities. By an education received in the first, he has the best likelihood of living; by that received in the latter, he has the best chance of becoming great.
We have of late heard much of the necessity of studying oratory. Vespasian was the first who paid professors of rhetoric, for publicly instructing youth at Rome. However those pedants never made an orator.
The best orations that ever were spoken, were pronounced in the parliaments of King Charles the first. These men never studied the rules of oratory.
Ma-