Book
1 2 | consider thus: Thou art an old man;~no longer let this
2 3 | by imitation; and in an old woman and an~old man he
3 3 | and in an old woman and an~old man he will be able to see
4 3 | thou wast reserving for thy old age.~Hasten then to the
5 4 | those who were famed of old, are now in a manner~antiquated,
6 5 | a bad habit. But as~the old man, when he went away,
7 7 | same things, with which the old histories are filled, those
8 7 | art come~according to thy old fashion. I am not angry
9 8 | is; and~when it has grown old, what kind of thing it becomes,
10 8 | too should first become old women and~old men and then
11 8 | first become old women and~old men and then die? What then
12 8 | appears to decay and to grow old and to be~useless she changes
13 9 | to be~young and to grow old, and to increase and to
14 9 | youth, thy~manhood, thy old age, for in these also every
15 9 | who~dies at the extremest old age will be brought into
16 11| manner he who is~forty years old, if he has any understanding
17 11| kind.~ After tragedy the old comedy was introduced, which
18 12| nature fixes, sometimes as in old age the~peculiar nature
|