LOGOI

Seneca Elder

Fragmenta

Seneca Elder — in Latin.

The words most alive here

When one word carries both *to say* and *to set apart as holy*, is the boundary between them a difference, or a memory?

By how often they stand in this work, the commonest particles set aside. Each opens onto its own word.

Read from it

  • noui uero et praecipue declamatores audacius nec mehercule sine motu quodam imaginantur, ut Seneca in controuersia cuius summa est, quod pater filium et nouercam inducente altero filio in adulterio deprensos occidit: “duc, sequor: accipe hanc senilem manum et quocumque uis inprime” et post paulo: “aspice, inquit, quod diu non credidisti. ego uero non uideo, nox oboritur et crassa caligo.”

    Seneca the Elder, Fragmenta 1.2
  • et Seneca tradidit Iulium Montanum poetam solitum dicere, inuolaturum se Vergilio quaedam si et uocem posset et os et hypocrisin: eosdem enim uersus ipso pronuntiante bene sonare, sine illo inanes esse mutosque.

    Seneca the Elder, Fragmenta 1.4
  • nam et in totum iurare, nisi ubi necesse est, graui uiro parum conuenit, et est a Seneca dictum eleganter, non patronorum hoc esse sed testium.

    Seneca the Elder, Fragmenta 1.3
  • nam memini iuuenis admodum inter Pomponium ac Senecam etiam praefationibus esse tractatum an “gradus eliminat” in tragoedia dici oportuisset.

    Seneca the Elder, Fragmenta 1.1

Doors

Latin text and lemmatization derived from the Perseus Digital Library (canonical-latinLit), CC BY-SA 4.0. Lewis & Short (public domain) via Perseus. This derived data is shared under the same CC BY-SA 4.0 license.