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III

[3arg] That it is more disgraceful to be praised coldly than to be accused bitterly.


FAVORINUS the philosopher used to say that it was more shameful to be praised faintly and coldly than to be censured violently and severely: “For,” said he, “the man who reviles and censures you is regarded as unjust and hostile towards you in proportion to the bitterness of his invective, and therefore he is usually not believed. But one who praises grudgingly and faintly seems to lack a theme; he is regarded as the friend of a man whom he would like to praise but as unable to find anything in him which he can justly commend.”

[p. 361]

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    • A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), SYMPHO´NIA
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