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| source = CL_arch
| source = CL_arch
| date = 45 BCE
| date = 45 BCE
| location = [[A6]]
| location = A6
| terminal = [[A06]]
| terminal = [[A06]]
}}<blockquote>Shall the industrious husbandman, then, plant trees the fruit of which he shall never see? And shall not the great man found laws, institutions, and a republic? What does the procreation of children imply, and our care to continue our names, and our adoptions, and our scrupulous exactness in drawing up wills, and the inscriptions on monuments, and panegyrics, but that our thoughts run on futurity?
}}<blockquote>Shall the industrious husbandman, then, plant trees the fruit of which he shall never see? And shall not the great man found laws, institutions, and a republic? What does the procreation of children imply, and our care to continue our names, and our adoptions, and our scrupulous exactness in drawing up wills, and the inscriptions on monuments, and panegyrics, but that our thoughts run on futurity?

Revision as of 18:14, 19 March 2024

cicero.txt
Source: CL_arch
Date: 45 BCE
Area: A6

cicero.txt is a text document stored in terminal A06 in A6.

Contents

Shall the industrious husbandman, then, plant trees the fruit of which he shall never see? And shall not the great man found laws, institutions, and a republic? What does the procreation of children imply, and our care to continue our names, and our adoptions, and our scrupulous exactness in drawing up wills, and the inscriptions on monuments, and panegyrics, but that our thoughts run on futurity?

[cannot retrieve: Tusculan_Disputations 484-F5045]

What do you imagine that so many and such great men of our republic, who have sacrificed their lives for its good, expected? Do you believe that they thought that their names should not continue beyond their lives? None ever encountered death for their country but under a firm persuasion of immortality! Themistocles might have lived at his ease; so might Epaminondas; and, not to look abroad and among the ancients for instances, so might I myself. But, somehow or other there clings to our minds a certain presage of future ages; and this both exists most firmly, and appears most clearly, in men of the loftiest genius and greatest souls. Take away this, and who would be so mad as to spend his life amidst toils and dangers?

Notes

  • The text, as noted, is excerpted from the Tusculan Disputations of Ancient Roman writer and statesman, Marcus Tullius Cicero, specifically from sections XIV and XV