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50
EXERCISES
his arms (his own).
- The Gaul praises his arms (not his own).
- This farmer often plows their fields.
- Those wretched slaves long for their master (their own).
- Those wretched slaves long for their master (not their own).
- Free men love their own fatherland.
- They love its villages and towns.
118.
DIALOGUE[1]
Cornelius and Marcus
- M. Quis est vir, Cornēlī, cum puerō parvō? Estne Rōmānus et līber?
- C. Rōmānus nōn est, Mārce. Is vir est servus et eius domicilium est in silvīs Galliae.
- M. Estne puer fīlius eius servī an alterīus?
- C. Neutrīus fīlius est puer. Is est fīlius lēgātī Sextī.
- M. Quō puer cum eō servō properat?
- C. Is cum servō properat ad lātōs Sextī agrōs.[2] Tōtum frūmentum est iam mātūrum et magnus servōrum numerus in Italiae[3] agrīs labōrat.
- M. Agricolaene sunt Gallī et patriae suae agrōs arant?
- C. Nōn agricolae sunt. Bellum amant Gallī, nōn agrī cultūram. Apud eōs virī pugnant et fēminae auxiliō līberōrum agrōs arant parantque cibum.
- M. Magister noster puerīs puellīsque grātās Gallōrum fābulās saepe nārrat et laudat eōs saepe.
- C. Mala est fortūna eōrum et saepe miserī servī multīs cum lacrimīs patriam suam dēsīderant.
Second Review, Lessons IX-XVII, §§ 506–509