De oratore libri tresGeorg Olms Verlag |
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Page 10
... Hence it has been usually supposed that the prosecution of Caepio was postponed to the year of the consulship of Crassus , i.e. B. c . 95. But Mommsen has shown conclusively that it cannot be placed at so late a date ( iii . 186 note ) ...
... Hence it has been usually supposed that the prosecution of Caepio was postponed to the year of the consulship of Crassus , i.e. B. c . 95. But Mommsen has shown conclusively that it cannot be placed at so late a date ( iii . 186 note ) ...
Page 17
... Hence he is made to discourse on the subjects of inventio , collocatio , and memoria in book ii . In the other books he appears mainly as the champion of practice as opposed to theory ; and we learn that he was always , in his public ...
... Hence he is made to discourse on the subjects of inventio , collocatio , and memoria in book ii . In the other books he appears mainly as the champion of practice as opposed to theory ; and we learn that he was always , in his public ...
Page 25
... Hence we can understand how his most famous speech was the funeral oration over his mother Popilia ( de Orat . ii . 11. 44 ) . After the death of the father of Catulus , not later than B. C. 134 , Popilia had married L. Julius Caesar ...
... Hence we can understand how his most famous speech was the funeral oration over his mother Popilia ( de Orat . ii . 11. 44 ) . After the death of the father of Catulus , not later than B. C. 134 , Popilia had married L. Julius Caesar ...
Page 30
... hence their attention was mainly directed to the outward form of speech . Here we may ( with Spengel , op . cit . p . 63 ) distinguish the different tendencies of the two schools , the Sophists of Greece proper devoting themselves ...
... hence their attention was mainly directed to the outward form of speech . Here we may ( with Spengel , op . cit . p . 63 ) distinguish the different tendencies of the two schools , the Sophists of Greece proper devoting themselves ...
Page 45
... Hence the teachers of rhetoric rapidly sank into the idle . theorists of the schools . We find the degeneration of eloquence be- ginning at a time which is strikingly contemporaneous with the fall of Athenian liberty . It is to ...
... Hence the teachers of rhetoric rapidly sank into the idle . theorists of the schools . We find the degeneration of eloquence be- ginning at a time which is strikingly contemporaneous with the fall of Athenian liberty . It is to ...
Common terms and phrases
Antiphon Antonius Aristotle authority best better Brut but it Carbo case Catulus causa character Cicero Cicero's common consul course Crassus dicendi different earlier editors eius Ellendt Ennius especially esset expression first followed force form found general genere give given gives good Gorgias great Greek hence here illa incl inquit instance Introd iure ius civile Kayser knowledge Kühner Lael language latter life Lucilius made Madv Madvig meaning means mihi Mommsen Nägelsb name neque nihil note omnibus Orat orator oratoris passage perhaps philosophy phrase place Plato Plautus point practice probably question Quint Quintilian quoted read reading reason reference Reid on Acad Rhet rhetoric right Roby same Sandys says Scaevola second seems sense sine Socrates Sorof speech speeches style take taken tamen there thought three time tion Tusc used usual Varro verborum view word words δὲ καὶ τὸ
Popular passages
Page 149 - Ego hanc vim intelligo," said Cicero, " esse in praeceptis omnibus, non ut ea secuti oratores eloquentiae laudem sint adepti, sed quae sua sponte homines eloquentes facerent, ea quosdam observasse, atque id egisse ; sic esse non eloquentiam ex artificio, sed artificium ex eloquentia natum.
Page 239 - In qua permaneo, Catule, sententia meque, quum hue veni, hoc ipsum nihil agere et plane cessare delectat. 25. Nam, quod addidisti tertium, vos eos esse, qui vitam insuavem sine his studiis putaretis, id me non modo non hortatur ad disputandum, sed etiam deterret. Nam ut C. Lucilius, homo doctus et perurbanus, dicere solebat ea, quae scriberet, neque se ab indoctissimis neque a doctissimis legi velle; quod alteri nihil intelligerent, alteri plus fortasse quam ipse...
Page 251 - Age vero, inquit Antonius, qualis oratoris et quanti hominis in dicendo putas esse historiam scribere? Si, ut Graeci scripserant. summi, inquit Catulus ; si. ut nostri, nihil opus est oratore; satis est non esse mendacem.
Page 178 - Aeliana studia delectant, plurima est et in omni iure civili et in pontificum libris et in XII. tabulis...
Page 364 - Veteribus, cum testis compellatus instaret: die ergo, Crasse, qualem me noris? talem, inquit, ostendens in tabula pictum inficetissime Gallum exerentem linguam.
Page 99 - Ut vero iam ad illa summa veniamus ; quae vis alia potuit aut dispersos homines unum in locum congregare, aut a fera agrestique vita ad hunc humanum cultum civilemque deducere, aut, iam constitutis...
Page 370 - Nasicae, qui cum ad poetam Ennium venisset eique ab ostio quaerenti Ennium ancilla dixisset domi non esse, Nasica sensit illam domini iussu dixisse et ilium intus esse ; paucis post diebus cum 5 ad Nasicam venisset Ennius et eum a ianua quaereret, exclamat Nasica se domi non esse, tum Ennius
Page 245 - Historia vero testis temporum, lux veritatis, vita memoriae, magistra vitae, nuntia vetustatis, qua voce alia, nisi oratoris, immortalitati commendatur...
Page 252 - Hanc similitudinem scribendi multi secuti sunt, qui sine ullis ornamentis monumenta solum temporum, hominum, locorum gestarumque rerum reliquerunt. Itaque qualis apud Graecos Pherecydes, Hellanicus, Acusilas fuit, aliique permulti, talis noster Cato, et Pictor, et Piso, qui neque tenent, quibus rebus ornetur oratio — modo enim huc ista sunt impprtata, — et, dum intellegatur, quid dicant, unam dicendi laudem putant esse 54 brevitatem.
Page 92 - Ac, mea quidem sententia, nemo poterit esse omni laude cumulatus orator, nisi erit omnium rerum magnarum atque artium scientiam consecutus.