The first line of the tirade that brings to an end the wonderful confrontation between the eldest Horace son and his sister Camille. (The tirade also brings an end to Camille’s life.)
I frequently quoted it during my teaching days, because our school had a Sophomore-year Rome semester that practically everyone went on, to the detriment of programs like languages and sciences that needed to lead students through a sequence in the first two years.
I probably do not need to underline that French unique can mean “only.” See this presentation.
The first line of the tirade that brings to an end the wonderful confrontation between the eldest Horace son and his sister Camille. (The tirade also brings an end to Camille’s life.)
I frequently quoted it during my teaching days, because our school had a Sophomore-year Rome semester that practically everyone went on, to the detriment of programs like languages and sciences that needed to lead students through a sequence in the first two years.
I probably do not need to underline that French unique can mean “only.” See this presentation.