Cicero: Ten Orations and Selected LettersAmerican book Company, 1912 - 310 pagine |
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Pagina 22
... position is this : we must either let Caesar stand for the consul- ship , still keeping his army with the senate's consent , or supported by the tribunes ; or we must persuade him to resign his province and his army , and so be consul ...
... position is this : we must either let Caesar stand for the consul- ship , still keeping his army with the senate's consent , or supported by the tribunes ; or we must persuade him to resign his province and his army , and so be consul ...
Pagina 215
... position in Rome which he had held before his exile . Clo- dius , reconciled to Caesar and Pompey , was busy in the politics of the triumvirate . He sought by well - timed riots to retard the consular comitia and bring in Pompey and ...
... position in Rome which he had held before his exile . Clo- dius , reconciled to Caesar and Pompey , was busy in the politics of the triumvirate . He sought by well - timed riots to retard the consular comitia and bring in Pompey and ...
Pagina 216
... position to defy Caesar . to force the hand of the senate . making the interrex and the tribunes guardians of the peace . Pompey , failing to get the dictatorship , did not push the trial of Milo . For more than a month nothing was done ...
... position to defy Caesar . to force the hand of the senate . making the interrex and the tribunes guardians of the peace . Pompey , failing to get the dictatorship , did not push the trial of Milo . For more than a month nothing was done ...
Pagina 8
... position of Tigranocerta , which was captured , and thus detract from the importance of this success of Lucullus . 13. usus erat : ' had fought .'- longinquitate , etc .: Cicero glosses over the real reason , which was not so much the ...
... position of Tigranocerta , which was captured , and thus detract from the importance of this success of Lucullus . 13. usus erat : ' had fought .'- longinquitate , etc .: Cicero glosses over the real reason , which was not so much the ...
Pagina 22
... position to hold against a mob . In view of the fact that it was the fashionable quarter of the city and Cicero's house was on it , a special night guard had been placed there to protect its residents . urbis vigiliae : ' patrols of the ...
... position to hold against a mob . In view of the fact that it was the fashionable quarter of the city and Cicero's house was on it , a special night guard had been placed there to protect its residents . urbis vigiliae : ' patrols of the ...
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Cicero Ten Orations and Selected Letters (Classic Reprint) Marcus Tullius Cicero Anteprima non disponibile - 2018 |
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Pagina 298 - Itaque te plane etiam atque etiam rogo, ut et ornes ea vehementius etiam, quam fortasse sentis, et in eo leges historiae neglegas...
Pagina 153 - ... quantum ad alias voluptates et ad ipsam requiem animi et corporis conceditur temporum, quantum alii tribuunt tempestivis conviviis, quantum denique alveolo, quantum...
Pagina 159 - Nam, si quis minorem gloriae fructum putat ex Graecis versibus percipi quam ex Latinis, vehementer errat; propterea quod Graeca leguntur in omnibus fere gentibus, Latina suis finibus, exiguis sane, continentur.
Pagina 5 - ... period. The source of each illustration is accurately indicated. ^| The aim of this edition has been helpfulness toward an appreciation of Cicero and of his literary work and the exclusion of borrowed or original erudition. Such help as seemed to be required by the ordinary student is freely given, but the smoothing out of difficulties which the pupil may reasonably be expected to conquer by himself has been avoided. Grammatical principles are enunciated as far as possible, and references to...
Pagina 156 - ... atque sie a summis hominibus eruditissimisque accepimus: ceterarum rerum studia et doctrina et praeceptis et arte constare, poetam natura ipsa valere et mentis viribus excitari et quasi divino quodam spiritu inflari. quare suo iure noster ille Ennius sanctos appellat poetas, quod quasi deorum aliquo dono atque munere commendati nobis esse videantur.
Pagina 139 - Most potent, grave, and reverend signiors, My very noble and approved good masters, — That I have ta'en away this old man's daughter, It is most true ; true, I have married her ; The very head and front of my offending Hath this extent, no more. Rude am I in my speech, And little bless'd with the soft phrase of peace ; For since these arms of mine had seven years...
Pagina 44 - ... Gymnasium 64 (1957) 131. See RG Austin (Aen. 2.21) on the epic mannerism in the following in eum locum (55.5). quod Tullianum appellatur: after Ennius, eg Ann. 409, Sc. 345V, attraction of the relative where the predicative noun is a name is attested only in prose. See Kuhner-Stegmann, i.38f. The career, between the Temple of Concord and the Curia at the foot of the Capitol, consisted of several rooms, of which the Tullianum was the death-chamber. No satisfactory explanation of the name Tullianum...