The Letters of Cicero: B. C. 44-43G. Bell and Sons, 1909 |
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Page xx
... citizen , " and he felt indignant at his being able to go safely to the city from which Brutus and Cassius and the ... citizens , and celebrating the games which he had promised . However , Cicero did not give up hope of him , and his ...
... citizen , " and he felt indignant at his being able to go safely to the city from which Brutus and Cassius and the ... citizens , and celebrating the games which he had promised . However , Cicero did not give up hope of him , and his ...
Page xxiv
... citizens . There is an absence of personal invective and insult , which shews that Cicero was not yet prepared to throw away the scabbard in his contest with Antony , though he had long seen that his existence made the murder of Cæsar ...
... citizens . There is an absence of personal invective and insult , which shews that Cicero was not yet prepared to throw away the scabbard in his contest with Antony , though he had long seen that his existence made the murder of Cæsar ...
Page xxv
... citizens . " The legions from Macedonia . The final step on Antony's part which made war inevit- able in Cicero's view was connected with the six Macedonian legions . He had - as I have said earlier in the year obtained from the senate ...
... citizens . " The legions from Macedonia . The final step on Antony's part which made war inevit- able in Cicero's view was connected with the six Macedonian legions . He had - as I have said earlier in the year obtained from the senate ...
Page xxxiv
... citizens , and the primary desire to be allowed to live and enjoy the position to which his talents had raised him . His vacilla- tion is never in his conviction as to right and wrong : but that which arose from his innate faculty of ...
... citizens , and the primary desire to be allowed to live and enjoy the position to which his talents had raised him . His vacilla- tion is never in his conviction as to right and wrong : but that which arose from his innate faculty of ...
Page xxxvii
... had been burnt , by executing - in what ap- pears a most arbitrary manner - a number of citizens and slaves . But this show of republican ardour soon disap- peared . He shared with Antony in the plunder of INTRODUCTION xxxvii.
... had been burnt , by executing - in what ap- pears a most arbitrary manner - a number of citizens and slaves . But this show of republican ardour soon disap- peared . He shared with Antony in the plunder of INTRODUCTION xxxvii.
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Common terms and phrases
2nd Edition Accordingly Antony Antony's April army ARPINUM arrived Asia assassins Astura ATTICUS AT ROME Balbus Bassus BRUT Brutus and Cassius Buthrotians Buthrotum Cæsar Cæsarian camp cavalry CICERO AT ROME citizens consuls consulship Cornificius CULARO danger dear Decimus Brutus decree despatch Dolabella DYRRACHIUM enemy F XI F XII favour fear feel forces Furnius Gaius Antonius Gallia Gaul give Hirtius History honour hope Ides of March Italy IUNIUS BRUTUS JUNE Lanuvium legates legatus legions Lepidus letter letter-carrier Lucius Macedonia Marcus MUNATIUS PLANCUS Mutina never Octavian Octavius opinion Pansa Phil Philippic political Pompeii position prætor Pray province Puteoli quæstor Quintus QUINTUS CORNIFICIUS regard Republic revised Roman safety seems senate sent Servilius Sextus Sextus Pompeius shew Syria tell things thought tion Trans Translated Trebonius TUSCULUM veterans villa vols wish word write written