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udent at law, who studied at Poitiers, had tolerably improved himself in cases of equity; not that he was over-burthened with learning; but his chief deficiency was a want of assurance and confidence to display his knowledge. His father, passing by Poitiers, recommended him to read aloud, and to render his memory more prompt by continued exercise. To obey the injunctions of his father, he determined to read at the _Ministery_. In order to obtain a certain quantity of assurance, he went every day into a garden, which was a very retired spot, being at a distance from any house, and where there grew a great number of fine large cabbages. Thus for a long time he pursued his studies, and repeated his lectures to these cabbages, addressing them by the title of _gentlemen_, and balancing his periods to them as if they had composed an audience of scholars. After a fort-night or three weeks' preparation, he thought it was high time to take the _chair_; imagining that he should be able to lecture his scholars as well as he had before done his cabbages. He comes forward, he begins his oration--but before a dozen words his tongue freezes between his teeth! Confused, and hardly knowing where he was, all he could bring out was--_Domini, Ego bene video quod non eslis caules_; that is to say--for there are some who will have everything in plain English--_Gentlemen, I now clearly see you are not cabbages!_ In the _garden_ he could conceive the _cabbages_ to be _scholars_; but in the _chair_, he could not conceive the _scholars_ to be _cabbages_." On this story La Monnoye has a note, which gives a new origin to a familiar term. "The hall of the School of Equity at Poitiers, where the institutes were read, was called _La Ministerie_. On which head Florimond de Remond (book vii. ch. 11), speaking of Albert Babinot, one of the first disciples of Calvin, after having said he was called 'The _good man_,' adds, that because he had been a student of the institutes at this _Ministerie_ of Poitiers, Calvin and others styled him _Mr. Minister_; from whence, afterwards _Calvin_ took occasion to give the name of MINISTERS to the pastors of his church." GROTIUS. The Life of Grotius shows the singular felicity of a man of letters and a statesman, and how a student can pass his hours in the closest imprisonment. The gate of the prison has sometimes been the porch of fame. Grotius, studious from his infancy, had also received from Nat
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