M. Tullii Ciceronis Orationes with a Commentary, Volume 2Whittaker, 1855 - Oratory, Ancient |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 3
... thing past all understanding how Naevius , who was at Rome , contrived to eject P. Quintius out of the land by means of the slaves which were their partnership property , and why P. Quintius could not keep in , when some of his slaves ...
... thing past all understanding how Naevius , who was at Rome , contrived to eject P. Quintius out of the land by means of the slaves which were their partnership property , and why P. Quintius could not keep in , when some of his slaves ...
Page 7
... thing , with such knowledge of the facts as we have . In the fourth , Cicero attempts to show that Naevius sent men to Gallia to take posses- sion before he got the Praetor's permission ; and he proves this by the time . And in the ...
... thing , with such knowledge of the facts as we have . In the fourth , Cicero attempts to show that Naevius sent men to Gallia to take posses- sion before he got the Praetor's permission ; and he proves this by the time . And in the ...
Page 13
... thing aloud , either at sales or on other occasions ( c . 5 ) ; a crier in a court of justice ( Verr . ii . 2. c . 30 ) . The root of the word is ' con ; ' but it is doubtful what it really is . See Hor . 1 Sat. 6. v . 86. Naevius was ...
... thing aloud , either at sales or on other occasions ( c . 5 ) ; a crier in a court of justice ( Verr . ii . 2. c . 30 ) . The root of the word is ' con ; ' but it is doubtful what it really is . See Hor . 1 Sat. 6. v . 86. Naevius was ...
Page 16
... thing . I should suppose that it would be a very simple thing . He fails completely in explaining ' ad denarium . ' There can be little doubt that ad de- " Fiscus , et ad vigilem ponendi Castora narium solvere ' means to pay in denarii ...
... thing . I should suppose that it would be a very simple thing . He fails completely in explaining ' ad denarium . ' There can be little doubt that ad de- " Fiscus , et ad vigilem ponendi Castora narium solvere ' means to pay in denarii ...
Page 17
... thing according to the instructions of VOL . II . : the vendor ( dominus ) . Keller observes on this passage : " Jus autem hujus loci pes- sime Klotzius interpretatus est . ' Naevius was not bound by his promise to Quintius : it did not ...
... thing according to the instructions of VOL . II . : the vendor ( dominus ) . Keller observes on this passage : " Jus autem hujus loci pes- sime Klotzius interpretatus est . ' Naevius was not bound by his promise to Quintius : it did not ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action Aebutius appears Asia authority Baiter but it Caecina called Capua case caussa Chaerea Cicero says Cicero's Classen Cluentius common consul could death esset evidence explained explains expression first following form Gaius Gallia gave give given good great Halm have hujus Italy judex judgment judices judicio judicium jure Keller Klotz know lands Livy made make Manutius matter mean meaning means mentioned Mithridates money Naevius name Narbo neque nihil note observes omnibus Oppianico Oppianicus oration order Orelli partnership passage pecunia people perhaps person place Pompeius possession power Praetor property question Quintio Quintius Quirites quum reading reason rei publicae right Roman Rome Roscio Roscius Rullus same See Vol seems Senate sense show shows sine slaves some speaks speech state Sulla suppose take taken tamen terms text there they thing time trial true used Verr vobis were word words would
Popular passages
Page 365 - De poena possum equidem dicere, id quod res habet, in luctu atque miseriis mortem aerumnarum requiem, non cruciatum esse; eam cuncta mortalium mala dissolvere; ultra neque curae neque gaudio locum esse.
Page 78 - Solonem dicunt fuisse, eum, qui leges, quibus hodie quoque utuntur, scripsit. is cum interrogaretur, cur nullum supplicium constituisset in eum, qui parentem necasset, respondit se id neminem facturum putasse. sapienter fecisse dicitur, cum de eo nihil sanxerit, quod antea commissum non erat, ne non tam prohibere quam admonere videretur.
Page 205 - Caesennia : cuius rei putat iste rationem reddi non posse, quod ipse tabulas averterit : se autem habere argentarii tabulas, in quibus sibi expensa pecunia lata sit acceptaque relata : quasi id aliter fieri oportuerit.
Page 342 - Neminem voluerunt majores nostri, non modo de existimatione cujusquam, sed ne pecuniaria quidem de re minima, esse judicem, nisi qui inter adversarios convenisset.
Page 353 - Mens et animus et consilium et sententia civitatis posita est in legibus. Ut corpora nostra sine mente, sic civitas sine lege suis partibus, ut nervis ac sanguine et membris, uti non potest.
Page 119 - Hie ego si finem faciam dicendi, satis fidei et diligentiae meae, satis causae et controversiae, satis formulae et sponsioni, satis etiam iudici fecisse videar, cur secundum Roscium iudicari debeat. Pecunia petita est certa ; cum tertia parte sponsio facta est. Haec pecunia necesse est aut data aut expensa lata aut stipulata sit.
Page 327 - Sapientissimum esse dicunt eum, cui, quod opus sit, ipsi veniat in mentem : proxime accedere illum, qui alterius bene inventis obtemperet. In stultitia contra est. Minus enim stultus est is, cui nihil in mentem venit, quam ille, qui, quod stulte alteri venit in mentem, comprobat.
Page 418 - ... non esse factos ; me esse unum ex omnibus novis hominibus, de quibus meminisse possimus, qui consulatum petierim, cum primum licitum sit, consul factus sim, cum primum petierim, ut vester honos ad mei temporis diem petitus, non ad alienae petitionis occasionem inter* The first man of his family to obtain a curule office, being thereby ennobled.
Page 156 - Atque ille legem mihi de xn tabulis recitauit, quae permittit, ut furem noctu liceat occidere et luci, si se telo defendat, et legem antiquam de legibus sacratis, quae iubeat impune occidi eum, qui tribunum pi.
Page 494 - Quid iam ista C. Mario," inquit, " nocere possunt, quoniam sensu et vita caret ? " Itane vero ? tantis in laboribus C. Marius periculisque vixisset, si nihil longius quam vitae termini postulabant spe atque animo de se et gloria sua cogitasset ? At, credo, cum innumerabilis hostium copias in Italia fudisset atque obsidione rem publicam liberasset, omnia sua secum una moritura arbitrabatur.