vincere."
[122] Ad Att., lib. vii., 2: "Adolescentem, ut nosti, et
adde, si quid vis, probum."
[123] Ad Att., lib. vii., 20-23.
[124] Ibid., lib. viii., 4.
[125] Ibid., lib. viii., 7.
[126] Copy of letter D, enclosed in letter to Atticus, lib.
viii., 11.
[127] Ad Att., lib. ix., 10.
[128] Ibid., lib. ix., 12.
[129] Ad Att., lib. x., 4.
[130] Ad Att., lib. xi., 5.
[131] Horace, Sat., lib. i., sat. 5.
[132] Ad Att., lib. xi., 7.
[133] Ad Div., xiv., 16.
[134] Ad Att., lib. xi., 24.
[135] Ad Att., lib. xi., 24.
[136] Ibid., lib. xi., 20-22.
[137] Ad Div., xiv., 22, 20. The numbers going the wrong way
is only an indication that the letters were wrongly placed
by Graevius.
[138] Ad Att., lib. xi., 22.
[139] Oratoriae Partitiones, xvii., xxiii.
[140] De Officiis, lib. i., ca. xxxi.: "Catoni cum
incredibilem tribuisset natura gravitatem, eamque ipse
perpetua constantia roborasset, semperque in proposito
susceptoque consilio permansisset, moriendum potius quam
tyranni vultum aspiciendum fuit."
[141] This was Lucius Volcatius Tullus.
[142] But it is now, I believe, the opinion of scholars that
Wolf has been proved to be wrong, and the words to have been
the very words of Cicero, by the publication of certain
fragments of ancient scholia on the Pro Marcello which have
been discovered by Cardinal Mai since the time of the
dispute.
[143] Ad Div., iv., 11.
[144] Pro Marcello, ii.
[145] Pro Ligario, i.
[146] Pro Ligario, iii.
[147] Ad Fam., lib. iv., 14.
[148] Ad Div., lib. ix., 16.
[149] Ad Att., lib. xii., 7.
[150] Ibid., 32.
[151] Ad Div., lib. xvi., 21.
[152] Pliny, Hist. Nat., lib. xiv., 28.
[153] Ad Div., lib. vi., 18.
[154] Ad Att., lib. xii., 12.
[155] Ibid., 18, 28.
[156] Ad Att., lib. xii., 14.
[157] Ibid., 18, 28.
[158] Ad Att., lib. xiii., 28.
[159] Suetonius, Julius Caesar, ca. xxxvii.
[160] Ad Att., lib. xiii., 44.
[161] Ad Att., lib xiii., 42.
[162] Pro Rege Deiotaro, ii.
[163] Ibid., ca. xii.: "Solus, inquam, es, C. Caesar, cujus
in victoria cecide it nemo nisi armatus."
[164] Caesar, De Bello Gallico, lib. iii., 16: "Itaque, omni
Senatu necato, reliquos sub corona vendidit," he says, and
passes on in his serene, majestic manner.
[165] Quint., lib. x., vii.: "Nam Ciceronis ad praesens modo
|