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Updated: July 2, 2025


V. XI. Sciences of General Culture at This Period V. XI. Reform of the Calendar V. XII. Dramatic Spectacles Ad Fam. vii. 1, 3; Ad Att. xvi. 5, 1; Sueton. Caes. 39; Plut.

In the Euthydemus Socrates says that the boys attending Connus' lessons laughed at him and called Connus γεροντοδιδασκαλον. Cf. also Fam. 9, 22, 3 Socraten fidibus docuit nobilissimus fidicen; is Connus vocitatus est; Val. Max. 8, 7, 8. IN FIDIBUS: 'in the case of the lyre'. Tücking quotes Quintilian 9, 2, 5 quod in fidibus fieri vidimus.

Equidem jam effeci ut maxime plebs et qui antea noster fuit populus vester esset." Caelius to Cicero, Ad Fam., viii. 71. Caesar says nothing of his putting to sea in a boat, meaning to go over in person, and being driven back by the weather. The story is probably no more than one of the picturesque additions to reality made by men who find truth too tame for them.

Middleton's Life, vol. i. p. 13. 4to; de Clar. Orat. 89. Ibid. Pro Muræna, 11; de Orat. i. g. In Catil. iii. 6; in Pis. 3; pro Sylla, 30; pro Dom. 37; de Harusp. resp. 23; ad Fam. xv. 4. De Clar. Orat. 91. Middleton's Life, vol. i. p. 42, 4to. Plutarch, in Vitâ. Warburton, Div. Leg. lib, iii. sec. 3; and Vossius. de Nat. Logic. c. viii. sec. 22. Pro Planc. 26; in Ver. vi. 14. Pro Dom. 57, 58.

His want of jealousy towards his rivals was remarkable; this was exemplified in his esteem for Hortensius, and still more so in his conduct towards Calvus. See Ad Fam. xv. 21. Vol. ii. p. 525, 4to. Pro Planc.; Middleton, vol. i. p. 108. Ad Fam. vi. 6, vii. 3. Plutarch, in Vitâ Cic. See also in Vitâ Pomp. Vid. Dr. Whately in the Encyclopædia Metropolitana. Lactantius, Inst. iii. 16.

So Off. 1, 83 leviter aegrotantis leniter curant, gravioribus autem morbis periculosas curationes et ancipites adhibere coguntur. The adverb tristius, which has in prose a superlative but no positive, occurs in Fam. 4, 13, 5. MENS ... RATIO ... CONSILIUM: cf. n. on 41. QUI ... NULLI: cf. n. on 46 qui pauci; but nulli here almost = non.

De Offic. ii. 17; Middleton. In Pis. 1. Pro Murænâ, 20. Plutarch, in Vitâ. Ad Atticum, i. 18, ii. 1. See Montesquieu, Grandeur des Romains, ch. xii. Ad Atticum, i. 19. Ad Atticum, lib. iii.; ad Fam. lib. xiv.; pro Sext. 22; pro Dom. 36; Plutarch, in Vitâ.

'young friends such as Scipio and Laelius are to me'. PRAECIPERE: here absolute, = praecepta dare; usually an accusative follows. STUDIIS IUVENTUTIS: 'the zeal of youth'. Studiis does not imply here the deference of youth to age; the studia meant are the virtutum studia of 26. OFFICI MUNUS: 'performance of duty'; cf. 35, 72; Fam. 6, 14.

Pro Arch. 11, 12, ad Fam. v. 21, vi. 21. He seems to have fallen into some misconceptions of Aristotle's meaning. De Invent. i. 35, 36, ii. 14; see Quinct. Inst. v. 14. De Invent. i. 7, ii. 51, et passim; ad. Fam. i. 9; de Orat. ii. 36. De Off. i. 1; de Fin. iv. 5. De Fin. ii. 21, iii. 1; de Legg. i. 13; de Orat. iii. 17; ad Fam. xiii. 1; pro Sext. 10. De Nat. Deor. i. 4; Tusc.

Expanse of wings 7 lines. Hab. Australia. TETTIGARCTA, n. genus, WHITE. Fam. Head very small in front, blunt; lateral ocelli close to the eyes, space between them with long hairs. Prothorax very large, extending back in a rounded form beyond the base of hind wings, the sides sharp pointed, the back very convex and wrinkled. Body and under parts densely clothed with hair.

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