1. Cicero, In Vatinium, 35 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., criticism of clodius as parricide Found in books: Walters (2020) 107 |
2. Cicero, De Domo Sua, 42, 133 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Walters (2020) 107 133. alter tibi descendit de Palatio et aedibus suis; habet animi causa animi relaxandi causa ψ rus amoenum et suburbanum, plura praeterea praedia neque tamen ullum nisi praeclarum et propinquum. domus referta referta fort. referta est vasis Corinthiis et Deliacis, in quibus est authepsa illa quam tanto pretio nuper mercatus est ut qui praetereuntes quid praeco enumeraret quid praeco enumeraret (-re ς ) ς, Steinmetz : quid praeconum numerare ς : quid praeco enuntiare χ : quid precium nuntiare π : quid praetium numerare (enum- ψ2 ) A φψ1ω : pecuniam numerare B audiebant fundum venire arbitrarentur. quid praeterea caelati argenti, quid stragulae vestis, quid pictarum tabularum, quid signorum, quid marmoris apud illum putatis esse? tantum scilicet quantum e multis splendidisque familiis in turba et rapinis coacervari una in domo una in domo σχψ : una in (vi AB φ ) nemo ς αβ πφ : una in venio ω potuit. familiam vero quantam et quam variis cum artificiis habeat quid ego dicam? | |
|
3. Cicero, On The Haruspices, 2 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
4. Cicero, De Oratore, 1.223, 3.4, 3.56, 3.121, 3.206 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 1.223. Sed aliud quiddam, longe aliud, Crasse, quaerimus: acuto homine nobis opus est et natura usuque callido, qui sagaciter pervestiget, quid sui cives eique homines, quibus aliquid dicendo persuadere velit, cogitent, sentiant, opinentur, exspectent; teneat oportet venas cuiusque generis, aetatis, ordinis, et eorum, apud quos aliquid aget aut erit acturus, mentis sensusque degustet; 3.4. Hic cum homini et vehementi et diserto et in primis forti ad resistendum Philippo quasi quasdam verborum faces admovisset, non tulit ille et graviter exarsit pigneribusque ablatis Crassum instituit coercere. Quo quidem ipso in loco multa a Crasso divinitus dicta esse ferebantur, cum sibi illum consulem esse negaret, cui senator ipse non esset. 'An tu, cum omnem auctoritatem universi ordinis pro pignere putaris eamque in conspectu populi Romani concideris, me his existimas pigneribus terreri? Non tibi illa sunt caedenda, si L. Crassum vis coercere: haec tibi est incidenda lingua, qua vel evulsa spiritu ipso libidinem tuam libertas mea refutabit.' 3.56. Hanc, inquam, cogitandi pronuntiandique rationem vimque dicendi veteres Graeci sapientiam nominabant; hinc illi Lycurgi, hinc Pittaci, hinc Solones atque ab hac similitudine Coruncanii nostri, Fabricii, Catones, Scipiones fuerunt, non tam fortasse docti, sed impetu mentis simili et voluntate. Eadem autem alii prudentia, sed consilio ad vitae studia dispari quietem atque otium secuti, ut Pythagoras, Democritus, Anaxagoras, a regendis civitatibus totos se ad cognitionem rerum transtulerunt; quae vita propter tranquillitatem et propter ipsius scientiae suavitatem, qua nihil est hominibus iucundius, pluris, quam utile fuit rebus publicis, delectavit. 3.121. Hanc ad consuetudinem exercitationis vos, adulescentes, est cohortatus Antonius atque a minutis angustisque concertationibus ad omnem vim varietatemque vos disserendi traducendos putavit; qua re non est paucorum libellorum hoc munus, ut ei, qui scripserunt de dicendi ratione, arbitrantur, neque Tusculani atque huius ambulationis antemeridianae aut nostrae posmeridianae sessionis; non enim solum acuenda nobis neque procudenda lingua est, sed onerandum complendumque pectus maximarum rerum et plurimarum suavitate, copia, varietate. 3.206. Orationis autem ipsius tamquam armorum est vel ad usum comminatio et quasi petitio vel ad venustatem ipsa m tractatio. Nam et geminatio verborum habet interdum vim, leporem alias, et paulum immutatum verbum atque deflexum et eiusdem verbi crebra tum a primo repetitio, tum in extremum conversio et in eadem verba impetus et concursio et adiunctio et progressio et eiusdem verbi crebrius positi quaedam distinctio et revocatio verbi et illa, quae similiter desinunt aut quae cadunt similiter aut quae paribus paria referuntur aut quae sunt inter se similia. | |
|
5. Cicero, On His Consulship, 2, 45 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Walters (2020) 85 |
6. Cicero, Letters, 10.10.4-10.10.5 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., criticism of clodius as parricide Found in books: Walters (2020) 107 |
7. Cicero, Letters To Quintus, 2.4.1 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
8. Cicero, In Catilinam, 1.4 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
9. Cicero, Pro Sulla, 77 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., criticism of clodius as parricide Found in books: Walters (2020) 107 77. in hunc igitur gregem vos nunc P. Sullam, iudices, ex his iis ς, ed. V qui cum hoc vivunt atque atque aut T : at π vixerunt honestissimorum hominum hominum amicorum T gregibus reicietis, ex hoc amicorum amicorum Klotz : hominum codd. numero, ex hac familiarium familiarium T π b2 χ : familiari cett. dignitate in impiorum partem atque in parricidarum sedem sedem T π : cedem cett. et et atque T : ac ab numerum transferetis? Vbi erit igitur illud firmissimum firmissimum T : fortissimum cett. praesidium pudoris, quo in loco nobis vita ante acta proderit, quod ad tempus existimationis partae fructus reservabitur, si in in non T : nos in Richter extremo discrimine ac dimicatione fortunae deseret deseret k : deserit (-uit b1c2 ) cett. , si non aderit, si nihil adiuvabit? | |
|
10. Cicero, Paradoxa Stoicorum, 41 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
11. Cicero, Pro Cluentio, 68 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
12. Cicero, Pro Plancio, 70 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., criticism of clodius as parricide Found in books: Walters (2020) 107 |
13. Cicero, Pro Sestio, 109, 88 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Walters (2020) 85 |
14. Anon., Rhetorica Ad Herennium, 4.26, 4.38, 4.51 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 | 4.26. This figure ought to be brief, and completed in an unbroken period. Furthermore, it is not only agreeable to the ear on account of its brief and complete rounding-off, but by means of the contrary statement it also forcibly proves what the speaker needs to prove; and from a statement which is not open to question it draws a thought which is in question, in such a way that the inference cannot be refuted, or can be refuted only with much the greatest difficulty. Colon or Clause is the name given to a sentence member, brief and complete, which does not express the entire thought, but is in turn supplemented by another colon, as follows: "On the one hand you were helping your enemy." That is one soâcalled colon; it ought then to be supplemented by a second: "And on the other you were hurting your friend." This figure can consist of two cola, but it is neatest and most complete when composed of three, as follows: "You were helping your enemy, you were hurting your friend, and you were not consulting your own best interests." Again: "You have not consulted the welfare of the republic, nor have you helped your friends, nor have you resisted your enemies." It is called a Comma or Phrase when single words are set apart by pauses in staccato speech, as follows: "By your vigour, voice, looks you have terrified your adversaries." Again: "You have destroyed your enemies by jealousy, injuries, influence, perfidy." There is this difference in onset between the last figure and the one preceding: the former moves upon its object more slowly and less often, the latter strikes more quickly and frequently. Accordingly in the first figure it seems that the arm draws back and the hand whirls about to bring the sword to the adversary's body, while in the second his body is as it were pierced with quick and repeated thrusts. 4.38. Conjunction occurs when both the previous and the succeeding phrases are held together by place and the verb between them, as follows: "Either with disease physical beauty fades, or with age." It is Adjunction when the verb holding the sentence together is placed not in the middle, but at the beginning or the end. At the beginning, as follows: "Fades physical beauty with disease or age." At the end, as follows: "Either with disease or age physical beauty fades." Disjunction is suited to elegant display, and so we shall use it moderately, that it may not cloy; Conjunction is suited to brevity, and hence is to be used more frequently. These three figures spring from a single type. Reduplication is the repetition of one or more words for the purpose of Amplification or Appeal to Pity, as follows: "You are promoting riots, Gaius Gracchus, yes, civil and internal riots." Again: "You were not moved when his mother embraced your knees? You were not moved?" Again: "You now even dare to come into the sight of these citizens, traitor to the fatherland? Traitor, I say, to the fatherland, you dare come into the sight of these citizens?" The reiteration of the same word makes a deep impression upon the hearer and inflicts a major wound upon the opposition â as if a weapon should repeatedly pierce the same part of the body. Synonymy or Interpretation is the figure which does not duplicate the same word by repeating it, but replaces the word that has been used by another of the same meaning, as follows: "You have overturned the republic from its roots; you have demolished the state from its foundations." Again: "You have impiously beaten your father; you have cruelly laid hands upon your parent." The hearer cannot but be impressed when the force of the first expression is renewed by the explanatory synonym. 4.51. Vivid Description is the name for the figure which contains a clear, lucid, and impressive exposition of the consequences of an act, as follows: "But, men of the jury, if by your votes you free this defendant, immediately, like a lion released from his cage, or some foul beast loosed from his chains, he will slink and prowl about in the forum, sharpening his teeth to attack every one's property, assaulting every man, friend and enemy, known to him or unknown, now despoiling a good name, now attacking a life, now bringing ruin upon a house and its entire household, shaking the republic from its foundations. Therefore, men of the jury, cast him out from the state, free every one from fear, and finally, think of yourselves. For if you release this creature without punishment, believe me, gentlemen, it is against yourselves that you will have let loose a wild and savage beast." Again: "For if you inflict a heavy penalty upon the defendant, men of the jury, you will at once by a single judgement have taken many lives. His aged father, who has set the entire hope of his last years on this young man, will have no reason for wishing to stay alive. His small children, deprived of their father's aid, will be exposed as objects of scorn and contempt to their father's enemies. His entire household will collapse under this undeserved calamity. But his enemies, when once they have won the bloody palm by the most cruel of victories, will exult over the miseries of these unfortunates, and will be found insolent on the score of deeds as well as of words." Again: "For none of you, fellow citizens, fails to see what miseries usually follow upon the capture of a city. Those who have borne arms against the victors are forthwith slain with extreme cruelty. of the rest, those who by reason of youth and strength can endure hard labour are carried off into slavery, and those who cannot are deprived of life. In short, at one and the same time a house blazes up by the enemy's torch, and they whom nature or free choice has joined in the bonds of kinship or of sympathy are dragged apart. of the children, some are torn from their parents' arms, others murdered on their parents' bosom, still others violated at their parents' feet. No one, men of the jury, can, by words, do justice to the deed, nor reproduce in language the magnitude of the disaster." With this kind of figure either indignation or pity can be aroused, when the consequences of an act, taken together as a whole, are concisely set forth in a clear style. |
|
15. Philippus Thessalonicensis, Epigrams, 2.86 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
16. Cato The Elder, M. Aemilius Scaurus, 66.24 Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |
17. Cato The Elder, Ti. Sempronius Gracchus, 34.16 Tagged with subjects: •servilius vatia isauricus, p., rebuke leaving clodius mutilated Found in books: Walters (2020) 71 |