The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volumen2Hodges, Figgis ; Longmans, Green, 1906 |
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Página xvii
... brother . For when Pompey met him a few days after leaving Luca , he said , " You are the very man I wanted ; nothing could have been more opportune ; if you do not speak very seriously to your brother Marcus , you will have to pay up ...
... brother . For when Pompey met him a few days after leaving Luca , he said , " You are the very man I wanted ; nothing could have been more opportune ; if you do not speak very seriously to your brother Marcus , you will have to pay up ...
Página xviii
... brother by waving a banner which his former allies would not follow ( 153 , 21 ) , though they would fain have encouraged him to wave it still , because they saw that his enthusiasm would be his ruin . Cicero , therefore , can hardly be ...
... brother by waving a banner which his former allies would not follow ( 153 , 21 ) , though they would fain have encouraged him to wave it still , because they saw that his enthusiasm would be his ruin . Cicero , therefore , can hardly be ...
Página xx
... brother , they are irresistible ; and they want to make this generally felt.'§ The whole state of things is σκυλμός , || OKUλuós , a piece of tracasserie . ' Yet there is no choice . The Optimates are not what they were ; they are ...
... brother , they are irresistible ; and they want to make this generally felt.'§ The whole state of things is σκυλμός , || OKUλuós , a piece of tracasserie . ' Yet there is no choice . The Optimates are not what they were ; they are ...
Página xxi
... brother , he says , ' I must be at something else ; I cannot remain quiet . ' * Cicero knew not what it was to rest . His nearest approach to rest was a change from one form of mental activity to another . But Cicero was not able to ...
... brother , he says , ' I must be at something else ; I cannot remain quiet . ' * Cicero knew not what it was to rest . His nearest approach to rest was a change from one form of mental activity to another . But Cicero was not able to ...
Página xxiii
... brother - in - law of Pompey , who , having spent all his means on the shows of his aedileship , naturally sought to recoup his shattered fortunes in his province . He returned from Sardinia in a position to buy the consulship . Happily ...
... brother - in - law of Pompey , who , having spent all his means on the shows of his aedileship , naturally sought to recoup his shattered fortunes in his province . He returned from Sardinia in a position to buy the consulship . Happily ...
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Pasajes populares
Página 246 - The good old rule Sufficeth them, the simple plan, That they should take who have the power, And they should keep who can.
Página 112 - Quid tibi ego alia narrem ? nosti enim reliquos ludos ; qui ne id quidem leporis habuerunt, quod soient mediocres ludi. Apparatus enim spectatio tollebat omnem hilaritatem, quo quidem apparatu non dubito quin animo aequissimo carueris. Quid enim delectationis habent sescenti muli in ' Clytaemestra
Página 157 - Oppium, disrumparis licet — in monumentum illud, quod tu tollere laudibus solebas, ut forum laxaremus et usque ad atrium Libertatis explicaremus, contempsimus sexcenties HS. cum privatis non poterat transigí minore pecunia, efficiemus rem gloriosissimam...
Página 212 - Kal. Nov. litteras datas a litoribus Britanniae proximis ad vi Kal. Octobr. Confecta Britannia, obsidibus acceptis, nulla praeda, imperata tamen pecunia exercitum ex Britannia reportabant.
Página 133 - Laertes' head. And these few precepts in thy memory See thou character. Give thy thoughts no tongue, Nor any unproportion'd thought his act. Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar. The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel ; But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new-hatch'd, unfledg'd comrade.
Página 246 - Society in time of war.) ... si sunt proelia promulgata, pellitur e medio sapientia, vi geritur res, spernitur orator bonus, horridus miles amatur : baud doctis dictis certantes, sed maledictis miscent inter sese inimicitiam agitantes. non ex iure manum consertum, sed magis ferro rem repetunt, regnumque petunt, vadunt solida vi.
Página 138 - Ego te commendare non desisto, sed, quid proficiam, i ex te scire cupio. Spem maximam habeo in Balbo, ad quem de te diligentissime et saepissime scribo. Illud soleo mirari, non me totiens accipere tuas litteras, quotiens a Quinto mihi fratre adferantur. In Britannia nihil esse audio neque auri neque argenti. Id si itast, essedum aliquod capias suadeo et ad nos quam primum recurras.