Select Orations: With Notes, for the Use of Schools and CollegesD. Appleton & Company, 1851 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Select Orations: With Notes, for the Use of Schools and Colleges Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione completa - 1868 |
Select Orations: With Notes, for the Use of Schools and Colleges Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione completa - 1866 |
Select Orations: With Notes, for the Use of Schools and Colleges Marcus Tullius Cicero Anteprima non disponibile - 2016 |
Parole e frasi comuni
animo been bellum Benecke Cæsar called case Catiline causa cause Cicero city civium Clodius common Compare consul cujus death Deiotarus edition esset first following form found fuisse general give given gives great hæc hanc have here History homines hominum huic hujus hunc igitur illa ille illi illo illud illum Italia judices Klotz language Ligarius line made Madvig mihi Milo more name neque nihil nulla nunc omnibus omnium oration orator order Orelli other Page passage people place Pompey populi Romani posse present propter publicæ quæ Quirites quis quos quum read reading reads reference rei publicæ Roman Rome Sall same says second See note semper senate senatus sense sentence sine Soldan state tamen text their tibi time unquam used vobis were word words work year
Brani popolari
Pagina 102 - Quam multas nobis imagines non solum ad intuendum, verum etiam ad imitandum fortissimorum virorum expressas scriptores et Graeci et Latini reliquerunt, quas ego mihi semper in administranda re publica proponens animum et mentem meam ipsa cogitatione hominum excellentium conformabam.
Pagina 103 - Atque sic a summis hominibus eruditissimisque accepimus, ceterarum rerum studia et doctrina et praeceptis et arte constare ; poe'tam natura ipsa valere et mentis viribus excitari et quasi divino quodam spiritu inflari. Quare suo jure noster ille Ennius sanctos appellat 80 poetas, quod quasi deorum aliquo dono atque munere commendati nobis esse videantur.
Pagina 203 - ... replied Drusus, contrive it rather so, that all the world may see what I am doing. It was situated in the most conspicuous part of the city, near to the centre of all business, overlooking the forum and the rostra ; and what made it the more splendid, was its being joined to a portico or colonnade, called by the name of Catulus, who built it out of the Cimbric spoils, on that area where Flaccus formerly lived, whose house was demolished by public authority for his seditious practices with C....
Pagina 110 - Est enim, iudices, haec non scripta sed nata lex, quam non didicimus, accepimus, legimus, verum ex natura ipsa arripuimus, hausimus, expressimus, ad quam non docti sed facti, non instituti sed imbuti sumus.