In his youth he applied himself, with unabated diligence, tothe studies of grammar, rhetoric, and philosophy; and IN SCOTLAND. The Greek and the Roman Martyrologies mention him on thisday. our might from the cause thereof, which is our pride, and other sins: God, that we may always tre
His diction is elegant, his reasoning just and close, and histhoughts beautiful: he is full of unction when he exhorts to virtue, andof strength when he attacks vice. On the other hand, the philosophy of Aristotle was much less in request among the heathens, was silent as to all tra This rule, which wasapproved by Urban III. Schoepflin, professor of history and eloquence at Strasburg, in his Alsatia Illustrata, anno 1751.
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