The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volume 1Hodges, Figgis & Company, 1904 |
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Page 38
... brother Quintus , Arcanum and Laterium ; and a house in Rome on the Carinae , which he seems to have made over to his brother Quintus , when he himself , after his consulate , bought for nearly £ 30,000 the magnificent house of M ...
... brother Quintus , Arcanum and Laterium ; and a house in Rome on the Carinae , which he seems to have made over to his brother Quintus , when he himself , after his consulate , bought for nearly £ 30,000 the magnificent house of M ...
Page 45
... bestowed upon him , and further enacted that no Antony henceforth should bear the name of Marcus ' ( Plut . Cic . 49 ) . which the Bronté sisters felt for their worthless brother ; I. § 2. CICERO IN HIS PRIVATE LIFE . 45.
... bestowed upon him , and further enacted that no Antony henceforth should bear the name of Marcus ' ( Plut . Cic . 49 ) . which the Bronté sisters felt for their worthless brother ; I. § 2. CICERO IN HIS PRIVATE LIFE . 45.
Page 46
... brother ; such in fiction was the love of George Eliot's Romola for Tito ; and such was the strange infatuation which made Tullia cling to Dolabella , in spite of his wicked extravagance , which squandered her dower , and his insulting ...
... brother ; such in fiction was the love of George Eliot's Romola for Tito ; and such was the strange infatuation which made Tullia cling to Dolabella , in spite of his wicked extravagance , which squandered her dower , and his insulting ...
Page 47
... brother Charles de Sévigné . Indeed , we can hardly acquit the clever Frenchwoman of assuming a rôle , and posing in the picturesque attitude of the adoring mother . Cicero speaks in the highest terms of his father and mother . Of the ...
... brother Charles de Sévigné . Indeed , we can hardly acquit the clever Frenchwoman of assuming a rôle , and posing in the picturesque attitude of the adoring mother . Cicero speaks in the highest terms of his father and mother . Of the ...
Page 50
... brother's treachery ! He wrote to Caesar a letter ( of which we still preserve the copy which he sent to Atticus , in Att . xi . 12 , 2 , Ep . 427 ) , completely absolving his brother from the suspicion of having instigated his own ...
... brother's treachery ! He wrote to Caesar a letter ( of which we still preserve the copy which he sent to Atticus , in Att . xi . 12 , 2 , Ep . 427 ) , completely absolving his brother from the suspicion of having instigated his own ...
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The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero; Arranged According to Its ... Marcus Tullius Cicero No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
aliquid animo Antonius apud Asconius atque Atticus autem Bährens Boot Bosius Caesar Catiline causa CICERO ATTICO SAL Cicero says Ciceronis Clodius codd comitia Commentariolum Commentariolum Petitionis consul consulship Crat Crit Dyrrachi eius enim Epirus epistula erat erit esset fuit haec homines hominum illa illo illud illum ipse ipsum Klotz letters litteras Madvig magis Marcus means meis Metellus mihi modo multa neque nihil nisi nobis nulla nunc omnia omnis omnium passage Plautus Plutarch Pompey posse potest praetor primum probably publicani quae quaestor quam quibus quid quidem Quintus quod quoniam rebus refers rei publicae Reid Roman Rome satis scribis scripsi senatus sibi sine sunt tamen tantum Terentia Thessalonicae Thurii tibi tribunes tuae tuis velim vero Vide Comm vulg words καὶ
Popular passages
Page 285 - Or ruminate in the contiguous shade. Thither the household feathery people crowd, The crested cock, with all his female train, Pensive, and dripping ; while the...
Page 8 - On y voit notamment que ce prétendu homme d'État n'était qu'un égoïste et un myope, et que ce grand écrivain ne se compose que d'un feuilletoniste et d'un avocat. Voilà bien la même plume qui vient d'appeler Caton un don Quichotte et Pompée un caporal. Comme il est toujours préoccupé du présent dans ses études du passé, on dirait qu'il poursuit dans l'aristocratie romaine les hobereaux de la Prusse et qu'il salue d'avance dans César ce despote populaire dont la main ferme peut seule...
Page 26 - ... edidi ! It was then that Hortensius, feeling that no panel could fail to convict Clodius, hit on the expedient of facilitating matters, and obviating the hostility of the tribune Fufius, by giving up the consular bill, which empanelled a jury to be chosen by the praetor, and allowing Fufius to propose a bill providing that the jury should be chosen by lot out of the decuriae. This was of course the ordinary practice ; and it is clear that the consular rogation, iu providing a panel chosen by...