Excerpt from The Works of Cornelius Tacitus, Vol. 8 of 8: With an Essay on His Life and Genius, Notes, Supplements, &C
You have often enquired of me, my good friends, Justus Fabius (a), how and from what causes it has proceeded, that while ancient times display a race of great and splendid orators, the present age, dispirited, and without any claim to the praise of eloquence, has scarcely retained the name of an orator. By that appellation we now distinguish none but those who flourished in a former period. To the eminent of the present day, we give the title of speakers, pleaders, advocates, patrons, in short, every thing but orators.
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