Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 2 Haines 1920.djvu/344

 infests, at the bar saevit, II. 48; Use Of figure jrapaAen/u?, II. 45; in Spain, II. 141 (Sallu$t); speeches from the rostrum, II. 65; his trumpet note, I. 107, II. 75; style compared to pine-nuts, H. 103; his tusculan style (untainted and chaste), I. 43; chooses out his words, I. 5; good at invective, I. 129; consummate orator and commander, II. 151, 201; called catus, ii. 201; statues of, II. 3, 201; busts carried from Senate, II. 151; M. devoted to him, called his patron, 1. 152; M. asks for something especially eloquent by, I. 301; Fronto has been reading him, I. 153; mentioned, I. 167; read by M. 1. 117; imitations: tela volantia, II. 23; sanguinera demittere, II. 84; consiliosus, II. 146; impraesentiarum M. I. 184; felix arbor, II. 180; profanare = dedicare, II. 10

Catulus, Lutatius, despatch on his own exploits (De Consulate) to the Senate, II. 143

Carthage, Fronto 's speech of thanks for, to Pius, II. 281; Cannae, II. 29

Cavius (Gavius) Maximus, see Maximus

Caudium, Roman disaster at, II. 21

Censorius, Niger, a friend of F. and letters about his will, I. 255 flf.

Centumcellae, a seaside resort In Etruria, called Portus (now Civita Vecchia), I. 55; Marcus going to, I. 173

Cenumanus (Gallia Cisalpina), quoted from Helvius Cinna (in Gellius), II. 281

Cephalus, or Kephalus, I. 21

Charila?, freedman of Lucius, I. 301

Charisius, a grammarian about 400 A.D. quotes Fronto, I. 97n., 138n.; II. 8, 228n, 231n.; Ruhnus Be Comp. et de metr. orat. quotes from Charisius as bacchiacs. laetare (cp. I. 80), Frontone

Chrysippus, the great Stoic, got "mellow" every day, II. 11; as rhetorician, II. 67

Cicero, M. Tullius (sometimes called Tullius and his epistolary style Tullianus); speech for P. (Cod. L.) Sulla. II. 100; speech praising Pompey (? Pro Lege Manilla) sent to M., 11. 31; letter to Brutus about B.'s book de Virtute (?), I. 101; list of orators in the Brutus, II. 147; books ad Brutum and Ad Axivm to be copied by M.'s copyist, II. 159; extract from his Pro Caelio, 11. 160; treatises of, read to M., II. 5; speeches of, from Rostrum, II. 65; M. asks for some eloquent speech of, 1. 301; certain words (passage mutilated) occasionally used by, 11. 114; Ciceronian turn of sentence, II. 43; the modus Ciceronis, I. 68; writes copiose, at the bar triumphat, II. 48; his definition of supreme eloquence, 11. 145; Fr.'s extracts from, on eloquence, philosophy, or politics, II. 157; I. 80n.; M. reads a speech of his, I. 301; he asks for some selected letters of C, 11. 157; nothing more perfect than his letters, to be read even more than his speeches, II. 154; style of them, 1. 123 (see also Intr. p. xlin.); summum supremumque os Romanae linguae, II. 142; I. 7; his trumpet note, II. 75; rhythmical, II. 143; master of beautiful language, but not a searcher out of unexpected words, 1. 7; but cp. II. 157 f.; copious and opulent, I. 7; quoted, II. 144; contrasted with Sallust in use of figures, II. 159; mentioned, I. 167; far superior to Fr., II. 101; Tiro, copyist of his works, 1. 167; for criticism of his style by Titianus, see Intr. p. xlin.; the Tullian or easy epistolary style of C.'s letters, I. 123 (bis); tulliana conclusio. I. Ill; II. 42 Imitations of Cic.: fomentum solarium, etc., I. 176 (Cic. Tusc. II. 24); and see Priebe, de Frontone imitationem prisci sermonis adfectante, p. 9, and Schwierczina, Frontoniana, p. 30 328