The Life of Cicero - Anthony Trollope 1880 - Vol 2

318
LIFE OF CICEEO

Transcript of The Life of Cicero - Anthony Trollope 1880 - Vol 2

had
been
enacted
to
turn
darkness
into
light.
former
innermost
thoughts,
as
they
are
not
given
even
been
joined
together
n
opposing
the
election
of
Clodius
as
^Edile,
and
had
probably
surely
the
government
which
they
supre-
macv
of
Ca3sar,
and
acknowledge
.ourselves
to
belong
to
the
the
world
at
large
will
not
to
the
career
of
There
was
at
any
rate
a
passage
of
arms
He
was,
however,
after-ards
driven
by
the
expostulations
f
Pompey
to
vices
as
instances
of
an
almost
divine
forgiveness
f
injury.^
I
think
we
tack and
speech
to
which
I
refer
was
not
spoken,
own
followers
by
quoting
excellences
which
had
already
been
acknowledged
as
thirty-eight
ondemned
Milo
and
only
thirteen
were
for
acquitting
im.
have
spoken
the
words
which
afterwards
were
published
the
jury
might
been
on
the
jury
and
had
such
an
address
of
a
Roman
dependency
under
a
normal
Eoman
governor,
and
of
the
good
which
come
across
the
Euphrates.
He
writes
as
Wellington
may
have
done
from
Torres
Vedras.
He
Syria
in
which
Bibulus
was
now
Governor,
there
not
a
line
in
Mr.
Forsyth's
olume
which
is
not
governed
by
a
spirit
f
justice.
He,
having
thought
that
Cicero
had
been
too
highly
praised
by
Middleton,
and
too
harshly
handled
by
subsequent
critics,
as
apparently
seeing,
s
I
think,
how
impossible
t
was
for
a
Eoman
governor
Brutus,
and
the
people
of
Salamis
had
been
grievously
arassed.
Cicero
had
heard
how
cruel,
how
dishonest,
how
greedy,
how
thoroughly
Eoman
had
been
the
AND
POMPEY.
133
Cicero.
He
tliought
it
necessary
for
the
hopes
which
he
then
entertained
being
a
martyr,
his
AND
POMPEY.
135
hoUowness
of
triumphal
pretensions
ust
have
of
the
great
commanders
admire
them
as
having
been
law-breaking,
ot
law-abiding.
To
say
that
Caesar
was
justified
divided his
were
we
have
not
a
half,
of
his
speeches
not
a
half;
of
his
treatises
not
more
than
a
been
Caesar,
or
Pompey
Pompey,
does
not
seem
to
me
a
matter
so
difficult
as
camp,
which
he
did
in
safety,
e
was
not
well
received
there.
He
had
given
his
all
to
place
himself
along
with
Pompey
in
the
republican
uarters,
men
travelling
comfortable,
or
at
any
rate
cheaper
than
purpose
so
full,
dignity
required,
nd
courage
a
noble
spirit.
What
matters
it
to
the
unknown
man
whether
a
should
come
to
light.
But
the
general
idea
has
been
that
the
lady
had,
in
league
with
a
common,
some
of
his
officers,
and
then
took
in
the
proscriptions
f
Antony
and
Augustus,
as
did
his
father
But
of
the
child
we
hear
nothing
more,
and
must
has
endeavoured
to
console
him-elf
by
writing
a
treatise
on
he
as
he
was
and
place
e
cannot
presume
to
know
accurately
hat
the
circumstances
were
been
again
in
the
anywhere
else.
He
had
already
promised
already
been,
for
as
to
thinking
much
perhaps
dead man's
slightest
intention
of
quarrelling
slave.
For
Tiro
had
by
day
an
interview.
Then
danj^^er.
reply
of
Brutus,
if
indeed
friendship.
This
as
beams,
not
so
much
by
the
hand
of
one
man,
Augustus,
s
by
the
insist
upon
the
tyrant's
decrees,
uch
more
thoroughly
han
he
him
depart
out
of
Gaul.
was
with
them
they
had
had
^
a
letter
full
of
hope,
of
hope
which
against
receiving
with
quiet
composure
such
seventh
Philippic.
In
February
of
the
city
and
Antony
himself
should
be
Trebonius. Trebonius
them
away
by
thus
falling
nto
a
trap.
Nothing
is
so
common
to
recommend-
aetat.
64.
very
fine
in
the
original,
though
it
does
not
well
bear
;
in
the
lists,
till,
s
the
result
Eepublic
refuge
of
Brutus'
s
army
it
lias
ever
been
given
to
any
various
phases
of
portion
and
the
second
part
of
the
There
is
not
and
question
to
be
judged
is
one
of
conjecture.