us, Cicero defends, i., 190.
Rabirius Postumus, Cicero defends, ii., 53.
Raillery, not good at the Roman bar, ii., 262.
Reate, Cicero speaks for the inhabitants, ii., 48.
Religion, Cicero's, ii., 321.
Republic, Cicero swears that he has saved it, i., 241;
Cicero's guiding principle, 309;
held fast by the idea of preserving it, 310;
as conceived by Cicero, ii., 227.
Republica, De, Cicero's treatise, ii., 38, 251;
six books, 305.
Republican form of government, popular, i., 261.
Retail trade, base, i., 102.
Rheticorum, four books addressed to Herennius, i., 51; ii., 251.
"Rhetores," their mode of tuition, i., 52.
Rhythm, Cicero's lessons too fine for our ears, ii., 271.
Roman citizens, their mode of life, i., 315.
Romans, the, had no religion, ii., 321.
Rome, falling into anarchy, i., 50;
how she recovered herself, ii., 204.
Roscius, the actor, Cicero pleads on his behalf, i., 105.
Roscius, Titus Capito, i., 85, 90.
Roscius, Titus Magnus, i., 85, 89.
Rosoir, Du M, his testimony as to Cicero, i., 127;
his accusations against, 178;
as to Cicero's exile, 297;
his accusations, ii., 176;
accuses Cicero of cowardice, 191.
Rubicon, the passage of, i., 125; ii., 120.
Ruined man, Cicero returns from exile as, ii., 16.
Rullus, brings in Agrarian laws, i., 196;
his father-in-law had acquired property under Sulla, 198;
ridiculed for being "sordidatus," 199;
spoken of in the Senate, 203.
S.
"Saga," when worn, ii., 223.
Salaminians agree to be guided by Cicero, ii., 99.
Sallust, as to Cicero, i., 17;
as to Catiline, 187, 209, 219;
his story not conflicting with Cicero's, 220, 227.
"Salutatores," who they were, i., 112.
Sampsiceramus, nickname for Pompey, i., 291.
Sappho, the statue of, by Silanion, i., 157.
Sassia, her life, i., 179.
Saufeius twice acquitted, ii., 67.
Scaevola, Quintus, instructed Cicero, i., 43.
Scaptius, the story of, ii., 93, 102;
agent of Brutus in getting his debts paid, 96, 99.
Scipio the great, gives the idea of Roman power, i., 76.
Scipio the younger, in the dialogue De Republica, ii., 307;
his dream, 308;
translated, 333.
Scipio, Q. Metellus, candidate for the Consulship, ii., 61.
Sempronia, accused by Sallust of dancing too well, i., 193;
Catiline's plot carried on at her house, 230.
Sempronia Lex declares that a Roman should no
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