The Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 1Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 1810 |
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Pagina xxiv
... senate about Antony , he dresses up a speech for Fufius Calenus , filled with all the obscene and brutal ribaldry , against Cicero , that a profligate mind could invent ; as if it were possible to per- suade any man of sense , that such ...
... senate about Antony , he dresses up a speech for Fufius Calenus , filled with all the obscene and brutal ribaldry , against Cicero , that a profligate mind could invent ; as if it were possible to per- suade any man of sense , that such ...
Pagina xxxi
... senate . have denied this right of an appeal to the people : but Cicero expressly mentions it among the regal constitu- tions , as old as the foundation of the city ; which he had demonstrated more at large in his treatise on the Repub ...
... senate . have denied this right of an appeal to the people : but Cicero expressly mentions it among the regal constitu- tions , as old as the foundation of the city ; which he had demonstrated more at large in his treatise on the Repub ...
Pagina xxxiii
... senate was composed , were the most immediate gainers by the change , and , with the consuls at their head , being ... senate with fresh demands , till they had laid open to the plebeian families a promiscuous right to all the ...
... senate was composed , were the most immediate gainers by the change , and , with the consuls at their head , being ... senate with fresh demands , till they had laid open to the plebeian families a promiscuous right to all the ...
Pagina xxxiv
... senate ; and as oft as they were disappointed in their private views , and obstructed in the course of their ambition , used to recur always to the po- pulace ; whom they could easily inflame to what degree they thought fit , by the ...
... senate ; and as oft as they were disappointed in their private views , and obstructed in the course of their ambition , used to recur always to the po- pulace ; whom they could easily inflame to what degree they thought fit , by the ...
Pagina xxxv
... senate or people were voting at Rome , but came , attended by armies , to enforce their pretensions , which were always decided by the longest sword . The popularity of the Gracchi was grounded on the real affections of the people ...
... senate or people were voting at Rome , but came , attended by armies , to enforce their pretensions , which were always decided by the longest sword . The popularity of the Gracchi was grounded on the real affections of the people ...
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