[19]
We frequently use the comparative for the
positive, as, for example, when a man speaks of
himself as being infirmior (rather indisposed).
Sometimes we join two comparatives, as in the
following passage1: si te, Catilina, comprehend, si
interfici iussero, credo erit verendum mihi, ne non potius
hoc ones boni serius a me qam quisquam crudelius
factum esse dicat.
1 Cat. I. ii. 5. “If I were to give orders that you should he apprehended and put to death, I think I should have reason to fear that all good citizens would regard my action as too tardy rather than that anyone would assert that it was too cruel.”
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