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Cn. Pompeius Magnus
Alcibiades

xxviii. 35.

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xxvi. 19.

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xxx. 29.

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xxxviii. 53.

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xxxix. 52.

VELLEIUS PATERCULUS, ii. 13.

ii. 35.
ii. 41-43.

CICERO, Philipp. ii. § 116.
VELLEIUS PATERCULUS, ii. 48.

ii. 73.

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ii. 83.

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ii. 108, 109.

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ii. 127.

ii. 40.

Compound of virtues and vices. CORNELIUS NEPOS, Alcib. i.

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TABLE OF GENERAL REFERENCES.

III.

ORATORICAL.

SPEECHES IN LIVY (Madvig's text 4 Vols., 8vo., 1862, is referred to.)

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By whom and to whom spoken.

Varro, the Consul, to Ambassadors of the Campanians who offered supplies. xxiii. 5.

Fabius Maximus to the people. xxiv. 8.

Publius Sulpicius, the Consul, to the people.

xxxi. 7.

Aristanus, Generalissimo of the Achæans, to the Council of the Achæan league.

xxxii. 20-21.

M. Porcius Cato, the Consul, to the Sonate.

xxxiv. 2-4.

Hannibal to the Council of King Antiochus.

xxxvi. 7.

Q. Cæcilius Metellus to the Censors M. Emilius Lepidus and M. Fulvius Nobilior.

xl. 46.

M. Servilius to the tribes in their Assembly.

xlv. 37-39.

Subject of speech and its length in lines.

Urging them to fight Hannibal themselves, reminding them of the benefits they had received from Rome and of the cruelty of the Carthaginians: urging the duty of fidelity. 40 lines.

Against electing Otacilius Consul. They ought to select some one capable of conducting the war against Hannibal the qualifications required. 63 lines.

About transferring the war with Macedonia and bringing aid to the Athenians against Philip. Best to wage war in the enemy's country. 47 lines.

Recommending that they should espouse the cause of the Romans against Philip, as their own interest clearly required.

130 lines.

For maintaining the law, which Oppius had carried in the 2nd Punic war for restraining the luxury of women, against the nobles and Tribunes of the Plebs, who strove to repeal it.

124 lines.

Advocating alliance with Philip, and showing how the war against the Romans ought to be carried on.

62 lines.

Urging them to be reconciled one to the other, and to abandon their private quarrels for the public good.

32 lines.

In favour of granting a triumph to L. Æmilius Paullus after his conquest of Macedonia: against S. Sulpicius Galba, and Paullus' own soldiers, who complained of the smallness of the booty.

153 lines.

N.B. The text of this speech is very corrupt.

II. DISSUASIVE.

Cn. Marcius Coriolanus to the Sena

tors.

ii. 34.

Against allowing corn to be sold at the old price to the plebeians. 10 lines.

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