288
Ibid., lib. v., ca. xix.
289
Ibid., lib. v., ca. xxiii.
290
Epis., lib. i., 1, 14.
291
Tus. Disp., lib. v., ca. xi.
292
Tus. Disp., lib. i., ca. xxx.
293
De Natura Deo., lib. i., ca. iv.
294
Ibid., lib. i., ca. ix.
295
Ibid., lib. i., ca. xiv.
296
Ibid., lib. ii., ca. xxix.
297
De Nat. Deo., lib. ii., ca. liv., lv.
298
De Nat. Deo., lib. iii., ca. xxvii.
299
De Divinatione, lib. ii., ca. xxxiii.
300
De Divinatione, lib. i., ca. xviii.
301
Ibid., lib. i., ca. xlvii.
302
De Divinatione, lib. ii., ca. i.
303
Horace, Ep., lib. ii., ca. i.:
"Greece, conquered Greece, her conqueror subdued,
And Rome grew polished who till then was rude."
Conington's Translation.
304
De Divinatione, lib. ii., ca. ii.
305
Ibid., lib. ii., ca. li.
306
The story of Simon Du Bos and his MS. has been first told to me by Mr. Tyrell in his first volume of the Correspondence of Cicero, p. 88. That a man should have been such a scholar, and yet such a liar, and should have gone to his long account content with the feeling that he had cheated the world by a fictitious MS., when his erudition, if declared, would have given him a scholar's fame, is marvellous. Perhaps he intended to be discovered. I, for one, should not have heard of Bosius but for his lie.
307
De Republica, lib. iii. It is useless to give the references here. It is all fragmentary, and has been divided differently as new information has been obtained.
308
De Legibus, lib. i., ca. vii.
309
De Legibus, lib. i., ca. x.
310
Ibid., lib. ii., ca. xviii.
311