Quintilian

Quintilian

Institutes of Oratory

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Genre
Rhetoric
Citation
book.chapter.section
Chunks
366
§pr.1.1-pr.1.3–§12.11.22-12.11.31
Aligned sentences
41,480
日本語 13626 · English 7620 · 简体中文 8723 · 한국어 11511

Source edition

Quintilian. Institutio Oratoria, Volume 1-4. Butler, Harold Edgeworth, editor. Cambridge, Mass; London: Harvard University Press, William Heinemann Ltd., 1920-1922.

Source data

Perseus Digital Library · CC BY-SA (per Perseus's terms)

Cloned and adapted by Humanitext, with ongoing edits.

Summary

This monumental twelve-book work by the Roman rhetorician Quintilian presents a comprehensive system for educating the perfect orator, dedicated to his friend Marcellus Victor. The author argues that true oratory requires not merely verbal eloquence but, above all, moral virtue and practical wisdom. The curriculum begins in early childhood with foundational grammar and school education, progressing to liberal arts such as music and geometry, before delving into the core theories of rhetoric and issue formulation. The middle sections provide detailed instruction on the parts of a speech (introduction, narrative, proof, and peroration) for judicial, deliberative, and demonstrative genres, alongside style, figures of speech, and the cultivation of practical faculty through imitation and writing. Finally, the work concludes by defining the ideal orator as a "good man skilled in speaking" (vir bonus dicendi peritus), who serves the state through deep philosophical and legal learning, outlining his lifelong duty and honorable retirement.

Contents

366 chunks

Cited by book.chapter.section