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LONGINUS ON THE SUBLIME
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arity. In speaking, then, of Philip as "taking doses of trouble," Theopompus has laid hold on a phrase which describes with peculiar vividness one who for the sake of advantage endured what was base and sordid with patience and cheerfulness.2 The same may be observed of two passages in Herodotus: "Cleomenes having lost his wits, cut his own flesh into pieces with a short sword, until by gradually mincing his whole body he destroyed himself";[1] and "Pythes continued fighting on his ship until he was entirely hacked to pieces.[2] Such terms come home at once to the vulgar reader, but their own vulgarity is redeemed by their expressiveness.
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