The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volume 1 |
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Page xiii
But it seems to me that a selection from a correspondence must always be eminently unsatisfactory . The editor must base his selection on some principle . Most editors will be guided , as Mr. Watson is , chiefly by considerations of ...
But it seems to me that a selection from a correspondence must always be eminently unsatisfactory . The editor must base his selection on some principle . Most editors will be guided , as Mr. Watson is , chiefly by considerations of ...
Page xvii
Mr. Froude seems to think that Caesar did utter all those rhetorical commonplaces on the text mors ultima linea rerum est , which Sallust puts into his mouth , and that Cicero matched his thesis with the antithesis letum non omnia finit ...
Mr. Froude seems to think that Caesar did utter all those rhetorical commonplaces on the text mors ultima linea rerum est , which Sallust puts into his mouth , and that Cicero matched his thesis with the antithesis letum non omnia finit ...
Page xviii
Caesar's endeavours to befriend Cicero seem to me to be more naturally ascribed to personal feelings of admiration ... Yet he afterwards speaks of Cicero as ' trimming between the two parties ' ; and his view seems finally to resolve ...
Caesar's endeavours to befriend Cicero seem to me to be more naturally ascribed to personal feelings of admiration ... Yet he afterwards speaks of Cicero as ' trimming between the two parties ' ; and his view seems finally to resolve ...
Page xix
It seems that after so many years the sacred admonition must still be urged : ' Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's , and unto God the things that are God's . TRINITY COLLEGE , DUBLIN , May , 1879 .
It seems that after so many years the sacred admonition must still be urged : ' Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's , and unto God the things that are God's . TRINITY COLLEGE , DUBLIN , May , 1879 .
Page 9
... Catilinam competitorem nostrum defendere cogitamus . Hence he argues that the collection of the letters to Atticus which we have could not have been published till after the period of Asconius . † xxxvi . 43. Dio Cassius seems not ...
... Catilinam competitorem nostrum defendere cogitamus . Hence he argues that the collection of the letters to Atticus which we have could not have been published till after the period of Asconius . † xxxvi . 43. Dio Cassius seems not ...
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