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in these circumstances it is natural, I think, that it should make an indifferent impression upon its hearers. And these are the very circumstances which may detract most seriously also from the discourse which is now presented to you and cause it to impress you as a very indifferent performance; the more so since I have not adorned it with the rhythmic flow and manifold graces of style which I myself employed when I was younger1 and taught by example to others as a means by which they might make their oratory more pleasing and at the same time more convincing.
1 See Isoc. 12.1-2.