Book, Chapter
1 2, III | gone to study grammar and rhetoric; and the money for a further
2 3, III | master in the School of Rhetoric, and I rejoiced proudly
3 3, IV | the money for my study of rhetoric. What won me in it [i.e.,
4 4, II | years I taught the art of rhetoric. Conquered by the desire
5 4, III | have the profession of rhetoric to support yourself by,
6 4, IV | when I first began to teach rhetoric in my native town, I had
7 4, XV | great and divine, since my rhetoric master at Carthage and others
8 4, XV | in any of the fields of rhetoric or logic, geometry, music,
9 5, VI | because it was dressed up in rhetoric; nor could I think the man’
10 5, VII | class as a professor of rhetoric among the young Carthaginian
11 5, XII | to do - the teaching of rhetoric. The first task was to bring
12 5, XIII| provide them with a teacher of rhetoric for their city and to send
13 6, VII | this fad, I was teaching rhetoric there in a public school.
14 7, II | formerly professor of rhetoric at Rome, who died a Christian,
15 7, II | was no salvation in the rhetoric which he taught: yet he
16 7, V | to teach literature and rhetoric; and how Victorinus, in
17 7, VI | was one of my wearisome rhetoric textbooks. At this, he looked
18 8, IV | from the professorship of rhetoric, from which I had already
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