The Correspondence of M. Tullius Cicero: Arranged According to Its Chronological Order, Volumen4Hodges, Foster, & Figgis, 1894 |
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Página xv
... Cicero left Rome , to fulfil this task , and proceeded southwards , perhaps to Antium . He informed Atticus that he was not likely to have any fixed address.§ About the 20th he arrived at his villa at Formiae . On the 21st he had an ...
... Cicero left Rome , to fulfil this task , and proceeded southwards , perhaps to Antium . He informed Atticus that he was not likely to have any fixed address.§ About the 20th he arrived at his villa at Formiae . On the 21st he had an ...
Página xvii
... Cicero says , on January 26th , that from the time he left the city he had not let a day pass without writing to Atticus . The letters despatched on the 20th , 21st , and 24th appear to have been lost.§ A letter of the 24th certainly ...
... Cicero says , on January 26th , that from the time he left the city he had not let a day pass without writing to Atticus . The letters despatched on the 20th , 21st , and 24th appear to have been lost.§ A letter of the 24th certainly ...
Página xxiii
... Cicero wrote to Atticus , vii . 18 ( 316 ) , in good spirits , to tell of the arrival of his family , and to express his satisfaction at the favourable reception which ( as Atticus had said ) the reply of Pompey to Caesar had met with ...
... Cicero wrote to Atticus , vii . 18 ( 316 ) , in good spirits , to tell of the arrival of his family , and to express his satisfaction at the favourable reception which ( as Atticus had said ) the reply of Pompey to Caesar had met with ...
Página xxiv
... Atticus almost every day . But any attempt to reproduce it would simply resolve itself into a translation of all his letters . In reading his correspondence this expansiveness and impression- ableness of Cicero must be fairly judged ; ...
... Atticus almost every day . But any attempt to reproduce it would simply resolve itself into a translation of all his letters . In reading his correspondence this expansiveness and impression- ableness of Cicero must be fairly judged ; ...
Página xxv
... Atticus about this correspon- dence with Pompey , and says that he will evidently be compelled to go to Luceria , to join in the flight . On the 17th letters from Caesar and Balbus arrived . Cicero ... Cicero appears to feel that writing to ...
... Atticus about this correspon- dence with Pompey , and says that he will evidently be compelled to go to Luceria , to join in the flight . On the 17th letters from Caesar and Balbus arrived . Cicero ... Cicero appears to feel that writing to ...
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Términos y frases comunes
account Antony appears Arpinum Balbus Boot Brundisii Brundisium Caelius Caesar Caesar's Caesarem called Capua case causa CICERO ATTICO SAL CICERO TO ATTICUS Cicero's Civil War common consilium course CUMAE days Dolabella Domitius DXXXVI eius ellipse esset etsi expression FEBRUARY first FORMIAE found friend give given good great Greek Italy January know Lamb leave Lehmann letter libri life litteras made Madv make March mean meaning means Mendelss mihi money neque news nihil omnibus passage perhaps place Pompeians Pompeio Pompeium Pompey Pompey's possible present probably Quintus read reading reference Reid right Rome same scribis seems Senate sense September sine Spain take taken tamen Terentia think thought tibi time Tullia Tusculum used Varro velim Vict viii Wesenberg whole word words write written wrote year καὶ
Pasajes populares
Página 270 - From the entrance into this unnatural war his natural cheerfulness and vivacity grew clouded, and a kind of sadness and dejection of spirit stole upon him which he had never been used to...
Página 270 - Brentford, and the furious resolution of the two Houses not to admit any treaty for peace, those indispositions which had before touched him, grew into a perfect habit of uncheerfulness ; and he, who had been so exactly easy and affable to all men...
Página 86 - G-audeo mehercule vos significare literis quam valde probetis ea quae apud Corfinium sunt gesta. Consilio vestro utar libenter, et hoc libentius quod mea sponte facere constitueram ut quam lenissimum me praeberem, et Pompeium darem operam ut reconciliarem.
Página 134 - Idus Martias Brundisium veni, ad murum castra posui. Pompeius est Brundisii: misit ad me N. Magium de pace; quae visa sunt, respondí. Hoc vos statim scire volui: quum in spem venero de compositione aliquid me conficere, statim vos certiores faciam.
Página 412 - His autem spectris etiam si oculi possent feriri, quod quae velis ipsa incurrunt, animus qui possit ego non video. Doceas tu me oportebit, cum salvus veneris, in meane potestate sit spectrum tuum, ut, simul ac mihi conlibitum 25 sit de te cogitare, illud occurrat...