The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volume 1 |
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Page xvii
Moreover , even if it were true , plainly it would not by any means account for the conduct of Cicero or of Clodius . Pulchellus would not concern himself about the question whether Boris had one lover more or less .
Moreover , even if it were true , plainly it would not by any means account for the conduct of Cicero or of Clodius . Pulchellus would not concern himself about the question whether Boris had one lover more or less .
Page 3
The young Roman aspirant to political distinction looked about for some one to impeach or some one to defend as his only means of gaining public notice . There was hardly a man of eminence at Rome who had not appeared both as prosecutor ...
The young Roman aspirant to political distinction looked about for some one to impeach or some one to defend as his only means of gaining public notice . There was hardly a man of eminence at Rome who had not appeared both as prosecutor ...
Page 5
... whose defection from the ranks of the Optimates must have made him politically very distasteful to one whose ideal statesmen were Metellus Numidicus , § and Q. Lutatius Catulus . That the pub- lic letters are by no means so ...
... whose defection from the ranks of the Optimates must have made him politically very distasteful to one whose ideal statesmen were Metellus Numidicus , § and Q. Lutatius Catulus . That the pub- lic letters are by no means so ...
Page 13
This view of the situation ( in which , be it observed , the Optimates were by no means at one , some gravely distrusting Pompeius ) became obviously Utopian after the year 698 ( b . c . 56 ) . Yet the Optimates finally coalesced with ...
This view of the situation ( in which , be it observed , the Optimates were by no means at one , some gravely distrusting Pompeius ) became obviously Utopian after the year 698 ( b . c . 56 ) . Yet the Optimates finally coalesced with ...
Page 15
By no means . They put the public in possession of the circumstances in each of these cases , and taught them to look on these circum- stances with the eyes of the speaker and his party ; they converted resistance into acceptance ...
By no means . They put the public in possession of the circumstances in each of these cases , and taught them to look on these circum- stances with the eyes of the speaker and his party ; they converted resistance into acceptance ...
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animo atque Atticus autem authority Boot Caesar called Catiline causa Cicero Clodius Comm conjecture consul correspondence course Crown 8vo Edition eius enim esse esset etiam expression fuit give given Greek haec History homines illo illud Illustrations Italy letters libri litteras means meis Metellus mihi modo neque nihil nobis nunc omnes omnia passage perhaps Plautus Pompeius posse probably publica quae quam quibus quid quidem Quintus quod rebus refers Roman Rome says scribis seems senatus sense sibi sine speech sunt suppose tamen tibi tion tribunes tuis vero vols writing written
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Page 35 - ... ad summam: sapiens uno minor est love, dives, liber, honoratus, pulcher, rex denique regum, praecipue sanus, nisi cum pituita molesta est.