Translation of a text in Latin on learning and justice

The aim of Transcribe Georgian Papers is to produce useable text documents of the manuscript materials and not critical editions. Please be aware this document may contain errors in the transcription.

Found an error? Please report errors and issues in the transcription to transcribegpp@wm.edu.

Locked Protected is False Can Protect is False User is not Academic
This document fully transcribed and locked

The most Antient Library, which we can remember, is that which King Osymandas built among the Agyptians, and these words were inserted in the front: here is the unidisinal ^ [[addition]] [[underline]] shop [[/underline]] [[/addition]] for the mind. The tyrant Pisistratus, who very much cherish'd the study of letters, is said to have been the first at Athens who [[deletion]] had got [[/deletion]] [[addition]] [[underline]] collected [[/underline]] [[deletion]] [[unclear]] bought together [[/deletion]] [[/addition]] books [[deletion]] for and [[unclear]] [[addition]] he gave [[unclear]] [[/addition]] [[unclear]] [[/deletion]] publick use [[deletion]] and he gave [[unclear]] that they should be lent out to be read. [[/deletion]] the number of which the Athiens [[deletion]] the [[unclear]] [[/deletion]] afterward increas'd by their own dilligence. But Xerxes having taken Athens, burnt all the town except the citadel he took & brought to the Persians all that [[deletion]] [[unclear]] [[/deletion]]


Warning: DOMDocument::loadHTML(): htmlParseEntityRef: no name in Entity, line: 20 in /var/www/transcribegeorgianpapers.swem.wm.edu/public_html/plugins/Scripto/libraries/Scripto.php on line 800