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See a striking passage from Cicero's Academics, preserved by Augustine, contra Acad. iii. 7, and Lucullus, 18. De Nat. Deor. passim; de Div. ii. 72. "Quorum controversiam solebat tanquam honorarius arbiter judicare Carneades." Tusc. Quæst. v. 41. De Fin. ii. 1; de Orat. i. 18; Lucullus, 3; Tusc. Quæst. v. 11; Numen. apud Euseb. Præp. Evang. xiv. 6, etc. Lactantius, Inst. iii. 4. De Nat.
Lucullus, 2; de Fin. i. 1-3; Tusc Quæst. ii. 1, 2; iii. 2; v. 2; de Legg. i. 22-24; de Off. ii. 2; de Orat. 41, etc. Middleton's Life, vol. ii. p. 254. Ad Quinct. fratr. iii. 3. Tusc. Quæst, v. 2. De Off. i. 5. init.
By which proceeding the commons considered that their liberty was betrayed by the patricians, because the senate had obeyed those persons, as if they had a right to compel them, who had already gone out of office; and were but private individuals, were it not for the violence employed by them. The adjective imminutis also refers evidently to honoris insignibus. See Cicero de Orat. iii. 1.
Vita p. 180 from Joannes Baptista Poggius in Orat. Card. Thus "Oft unwearied did they spend the nights, Till the Ledaean stars, so famed for love, Wondered at them from above They spent them not in toys, or lust, or wine; But search of deep philosophy, Wit, eloquence, and poetry, Arts which they loved."
As You Like It, Act II. Sc. 4. Cicero, de Orat. ii. p. 346. Walter Scott Lockhart, died at Versailles in 1853, and was buried in the Cemetery of Notre-Dame there. The Rev. Edward Bannerman Ramsay, A.M., St. John's College, Cambridge, incumbent St.
But there was at any rate an epoch when the dominion of Rome over Italy demanded a certain knowledge of the language of the country on the part of Romans of rank. The employment of the lyre in ritual is attested by Cicero de Orat. iii. 51, 197; Tusc. iv. 2, 4; Dionysius, vii. 72; Appian, Pun. 66; and the inscription in Orelli, 2448, comp. 1803. Macrob. Tusc. i. 2, 3; iv. 2, 3; Varro ap. Serv.
But we, pacing along the middle and royal way, in which also the essence of the virtues lies, in the judgment of the learned, believe in Father, Son, and Holy Ghost." Orat. 32.
Respons. breve et orat. pariter sumuntur vel ex Proprio vel de Communi." Q. Who are bound to recite the Divine Office? Beneficed Clergy. Who are Beneficed Clergy? Beneficed Clergy are those who hold a Canonically erected benefice.
It was in Athens, where there existed the purest form of democratic institutions, that eloquence rose to the loftiest heights in the ancient world, so far as eloquence appeals to popular passions. Pericles, the greatest statesman of Greece, was celebrated for his eloquence, although no specimens remain to us. De Orat., iii. 34; Quin., x. i. Section 82; Plat.
Uxor viro si clam domo egressa est foras, Viro fit causa, exigitur matrimonio. Utinam lex esset cadem quae uxori est viro! Aulus Gellius, i, 6. De Consolatione ad Marciam, xvi, 1. Quintilian, Instit. Orat., vi, 1, 5. Pliny, Letters, vi, 4 and 7, and vii, 5. Great admiration expressed for Paulina, wife of Seneca, who opened her veins to accompany her husband in death Tacitus, Annals, xv, 63, 64.
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