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History of Julius Caesar Vol. 2 of 2

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2017
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Cicero, Pro Sextio, 34; De Legibus, III. 19.

581

Cicero, Pro Sextio, 34.

582

Cicero, Pro Sextio, 35. – Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 7. – Plutarch, Pompey, 51.

583

Cicero, Pro Sextio, 35; Orat. prima post Reditum, 5, 6.

584

Cicero, De Officiis, II. 17; Orat. pro Sextio, 39. – Dio Cassius XXXIX. 8.

585

Cicero, Orat. secunda post Reditum ad Senatum, 10; Orat. pro Domo sua, 28; Orat. in Pisonem, 15.

586

We thus see that the power of observing the sky continued to exist in spite of the law Clodia.

587

Cicero, in the passages cited.

588

Cicero, Epist. ad Atticum, IV, 1.

589

Asconius, Comment in Orat. Ciceronis pro Milone, p. 48, edit. Orelli.

590

Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 9. – Plutarch, Pompey, 52.

591

Cicero, Epist. ad Atticum, IV. 1. – Cicero’s proposal was further amplified by C. Messius, tribune of the people, who demanded for Pompey a fleet, an army, and the authority to dispose of the finances.

592

Plutarch, Pompey, 52. – Cicero, Orat. pro Domo sua, 10.

593

Epist. ad Attic., IV. 2.

594

“I will add that, in the opinion of the public, Clodius is regarded as a victim reserved for Milo.” (Cicero, De Respons. Harusp., 3.) – This oration on the reply of the Aruspices is of May, June, or July, 698. See, also, what he says in his letter to Atticus, of November, 697. (Epist. ad Attic. IV. 3.)

595

Plutarch, Cæsar, 23. —De Bello Gallico, II. 35.

596

“But why, especially on that occasion, should any one be astonished at my conduct or blame it, when I myself have already several times supported propositions which were more honourable for Cæsar than necessary for the state? I voted in his favour fifteen days of prayers; it was enough for the Republic to have decreed to Cæsar the same number of days which Marius had obtained. The gods would have been satisfied, I think, with the same thanksgivings which had been rendered to them in the most important wars. So great a number of days had therefore for its only object to honour Cæsar personally. Ten days of thanksgivings were accorded, for the first time, to Pompey, when the war of Mithridates had been terminated by the death of that prince. I was consul, and, on my report, the number of days usually decreed to the consulars was doubled, after you had heard Pompey’s letter, and been convinced that all the wards were terminated on land and sea. You adopted the proposal I made to you of ordaining ten days of prayers. At present I have admired the virtue and greatness of soul of Cn. Pompey, who, loaded with distinctions such as no other before him had received the like, gave to another more honours than he had obtained himself. Thus, then, those prayers which I voted in favour of Cæsar were accorded to the immortal gods, to the customs of our ancestors, and to the needs of the state; but the flattering terms of the decree, this new distinction, and the extraordinary number of days, it is to the person itself of Cæsar that they were addressed, and they were a homage rendered to his glory.” (Cicero, Orat. pro Provinc. Consular., 10, 11.) (August, A.U.C. 698.)

597

Cicero, Epist. ad Quint., II. 1.

598

Cicero, Epist. ad Quint., II. 1.

599

Cicero, Epist. ad Quint., II. 1.

600

Cicero, Epist. ad Attic., IV. 3.

601

Cicero, Epist. ad Attic., IV. 2 and 3; Epist. ad Quint., II. 1.

602

Atia had wedded in first marriage Octavius, by whom she had a son, who was afterwards Augustus.

603

Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 14.

604

Dio Cassius, XXXIX. 12, 13. – Plutarch, Pompey, 52.

605
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