Eratosthenes says that in his extemporaneous
harangues he often spoke as from a supernatural impulse; and Demetrius
tells us that in an address to the people, like a man inspired, he once
uttered this oath in verse:
By earth, by all her fountains, streams, and floods! . . .
As for his personal defects, Demetrius the Phalerean gives us an
account of the remedies he applied to them; and he says he had it from
Demosthenes in his old age. The hesitation and stammering of his
tongue he corrected by practising to speak with pebbles in his mouth;
and he strengthened his voice by running or walking uphill, and
pronouncing some passage in an oration or a poem during the difficulty
of breath which that caused. He had, moreover, a looking-glass in his
house before which he used to declaim and adjust all his motions.
It was said that a man came to him one day, and desired him to be his
advocate against a person from whom he had suffered by assault. "Not
you, indeed," said Demosthenes, "you have suffered no such thing."
"What," said the man, raising his voice, "have I not received those
blows?" "Ay, _now_," replied Demosthenes, "you do speak like a person
that has been injured.
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