Now as for the sophists who have lately sprung up and have very recently embraced these pretensions,1 even though they flourish at the moment, they will all, I am sure, come round to this position. But there remain to be considered those who lived before our time and did not scruple to write the so-called arts of oratory.2 These must not be dismissed without rebuke, since they professed to teach how to conduct law-suits, picking out the most discredited of terms,3 which the enemies, not the champions, of this discipline might have been expected to employ—