Sunday, June 01, 2025

 

Plautus

William M. Calder III, "Classical Schoolarship in the United States: An Introductory Essay," in Ward W. Briggs, Jr., ed., Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1994), pp. xxi-xxxix (at xxix):
Ritschl, the admired teacher of Gildersleeve and Nietzsche, was also beloved by the second-rate who needed a doctorate as the union card to secure a minor teaching post. He made the catastrophic error of substituting "what needs doing" for the important. That is, he turned research into the higher crossword. He specialized in Plautus, an author with nothing of importance to say to an educated man of intelligence...
Eduard Fraenkel was "an educated man of intelligence."



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