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ldier, 195. Musical charm of Cicero's language, ii., 28. Mutina, ambassadors sent to Antony before, ii., 209; the battle, 223; badly managed, 228. N. Names, Roman, as to forms to be used, i., 38; usual with Romans to have three, 41. Nasica, his joke, ii., 262. Natura Deorum, De, ii., 252, 266, 294. "Nomenclatio," the meaning, i., 113. Nonis Juliis, ii., 188. "Novus ante me nemo," i., 202. O. Octavius, comes to Rome, ii., 181; meets Cicero, _ibid._; quarrels with Antony, 204; feared by Cicero, 205; would he be Consul, 232; marches into Rome, _ibid._; his enmity to Cicero, 233; his insolence, 237; is reconciled to Antony, _ibid._; the meeting in the island at Bologna, 238; his conduct, _ibid._; letter to him, supposed from Cicero, but a forgery, 240. Officiis, De, ii., 205, 252; perfect treatise on morals, 314. "O fortunatam natam," i., 277. "Old Mortality," torture as there described, i., 88. Oppianicus, his life, i., 179. Oppius Publius, his trial, i., 126. Optimates, Pompey their leader, i., 175. Optimo Genere Oratorum, De, ii., 251, 264. Orations, how Cicero treated his own, ii., 167. Oratiuncula, twelve consular speeches so called, i., 190. Orator, The, ii., 251; graced by the name of Brutus, 266. Oratore, De, Cicero's dialogues, ii., 38; sent to Lentulus, 46, 251, 256, 270. Oratoriae Partitiones, ii., 145, 265. Oratory, Cicero's three modes of speaking, i., 94; his charms, 137; purposes of, ii., 274. Ornament, Greek taste for, i., 154. Otho's law, speech concerning, i., 190, 204. P. Pagan, Cicero one, ii., 330. Palinodia, or recantation, by Cicero, ii., 23. Palatine Hill, Cicero's house destroyed, i., 325. Pansa, the Consul on Cicero's side, ii., 209; slain, 223. Paradoxes, the six, ii., 146. Partitiones, Oratoriae, ii., 251. Peel, Sir Robert, i., 303. Perfection, required in an orator, ii., 257; Cicero fails in describing it, 257, 258, 261. Perfect orator, not desirable, ii., 275. Philippics, origin of the name, ii., 192; the first, 193; the second not intended to be spoken or published, 198; commences with satire against Antony, 199; the third and fourth, 206; the fifth, 210; the sixth, 211; the seventh, 212; the eighth, 215; the ninth, _ibid._; the tenth, _ibid._; the elev
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