M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes et epistolae selectae: Selected orations and letters of CiceroScott, Foresman and Company, 1891 - 797 pagine |
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Pagina 24
... fact , it became quite the usual thing at Rome to ascribe to Catilina all unfathered crimes and outrages . It is at least significant that after the failure of the plot he went on with his plans to get place and power by the forms of ...
... fact , it became quite the usual thing at Rome to ascribe to Catilina all unfathered crimes and outrages . It is at least significant that after the failure of the plot he went on with his plans to get place and power by the forms of ...
Pagina 30
... fact , when he was charged at last with treason , he offered , as if confiding in the purity of his motives , to surrender himself to the watch and ward of any good citizen ( custodia libera ) . All this time , however , he was getting ...
... fact , when he was charged at last with treason , he offered , as if confiding in the purity of his motives , to surrender himself to the watch and ward of any good citizen ( custodia libera ) . All this time , however , he was getting ...
Pagina 55
... fact that there were two aristocracies , one of office - holders and the other of capitalists , which struggled most bitterly with each other during the last years of the Republic . - now an 12 a . The Nobles . The Roman nobility was ...
... fact that there were two aristocracies , one of office - holders and the other of capitalists , which struggled most bitterly with each other during the last years of the Republic . - now an 12 a . The Nobles . The Roman nobility was ...
Pagina 73
... fact it had no constitutional powers at all , but it had come to dominate all departments of state , to be in itself the government with the magistrates as its servants . One source of its power was its membership , the ordo 94 ...
... fact it had no constitutional powers at all , but it had come to dominate all departments of state , to be in itself the government with the magistrates as its servants . One source of its power was its membership , the ordo 94 ...
Pagina 74
... fact that the priests ( § 80 ) , as such , had no magisterial powers , and had to act through the regular magistrates . The influence of the senate over them has been explained 100 in § 95. In all these matters , and in the countless ...
... fact that the priests ( § 80 ) , as such , had no magisterial powers , and had to act through the regular magistrates . The influence of the senate over them has been explained 100 in § 95. In all these matters , and in the countless ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes et epistolae Selectae: select orations and ... Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione completa - 1894 |
M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes et epistolae selectae: Selected orations and ... Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione completa - 1892 |
M. Tulli Ciceronis Orationes et epistolae selectae Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione estratti - 1892 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Asia Bona Dea Brundisium Caes Caesar called case Catilina Cato causa charge Cicero Cicero's citizens city civium clause Clodius comitia common construction consul consulship Coss course courts death different eius elected election ellipse English Epirus esset Etruria explain first force form found give given good great huius ille Italy iudices latter Lentulus life made magistrates meaning means mentioned merely mihi Milo mood Murena name neque nihil note notice noun number numquam office omitted omnibus order people phrase place plural point political Pompeius position praetor question Quirites read regular rei publicae right Roman Rome same second see Exc see on Ep see on Mur senate senatus sense Sest sine slaves speech state subj subject Sulla taken tamen tense Thessalonica thought three tibi time tion title trial tribune TULLI CICERONIS used usually verb vobis were whole word words year
Brani popolari
Pagina 157 - Vigilas tu de nocte ut tuis consultoribus respondeas, ille ut eo quo intendit mature cum exercitu perveniat ; te gallorum, illum bucinarum cantus exsuscitat ; tu actionem instituis, ille aciem instruit ; tu caves ne tui consultores, ille ne urbes aut castra capiantur...
Pagina 77 - I pray,' in interrogative and imperative sentences is the sign of intense feeling. abutere, ' use up,' ' exhaust ' (not 'abuse,' 'misuse'); observe the quantity of penult and thus determine tense. 2. etiam, ' still,' in temporal meaning. 3. Nihilne, an emphatic nonne. Note the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses instead of a connective : it is called anaphora.
Pagina 78 - Catilina, patientia nostra ? Quam diu etiam furor iste tuus nos eludet ? Quem ad finem sese effrenata iactabit audacia ? Nihilne te nocturnum praesidium Palati, nihil urbis vigiliae, nihil timor populi, nihil concursus bonorum omnium, nihil hie munitissimus habendi senatus locus, nihil horum ora voltusque moverunt...
Pagina 237 - Omnis homines, Patres conscripti, qui de rebus dubiis consultant, ab odio, amicitia, ira atque misericordia, vacuos esse decet.