Testēs nunc vērō iam omnēs sunt ōrae atque omnēs exterae gentēs ac nātiōnēs, dēnique maria omnia cum ūniversa, tum in singulis ōrīs omnēs sinūs atque portūs. Quis enim tōtō marī locus per hōs annōs aut tam firmum habuit praesidium, ut tūtus esset, aut tam fuit abditus, ut latēret? Quis nāvigāvit, quī nōn sē aut mortis aut servitūtis periculo committeret, cum aut hieme aut refertō praedōnum mari nāvigāret? Hōc tantum bellum, tam turpe, tam vetus, tam lātē dīvīsum atque dispersum quis umquam arbitrārētur aut ab omnibus imperātōribus ūnō annō aut omnibus annīs ab ūnō imperātōre cōnficī posse?

31: Pacifying the Pond, or: Pompey and the pirates

With his last ‘geographical witness’, which is the entire Mediterranean coastline and every city located on it, Cicero has reached a new topic on which he will dwell for several paragraphs (§§ 31-35): Pompey’s war against the pirates in the previous year (67 BC)...[full essay]

Study Questions:

  • Identify all words in the nominative in the opening sentence (testes nunc vero iam ... atque portus). What is the verb of the sentence?
  • Explain the case of toto mari.
  • What kind of ut-clauses are ut tutus esset and ut lateret?
  • Compare and contrast the quis that introduces the second sentence (quis enim toto maris locus...) with the quis that introduces the third sentence (quis navigavit...): what is the difference?
  • Explain the tense and mood of committeret.
  • What kind of ablative is hieme?
  • What kind of ablative is referto ... mari?
  • Parse praedonum.
  • What are the subject and the verb of the last sentence (hoc tantum bellum ... confici posse)? What is the rhetorical effect of their placement?
  • Explain the tense and mood of arbitraretur.
  • Identify the subject accusative and the verb of the indirect statement introduced by arbitraretur.
  • What kind of ablative are ab omnibus imperatoribus and ab uno imperatore?
  • What kind of ablative are uno anno and omnibus annis?
  • Parse confici and explain its function in the sentence.
  • In the opening sentence Cicero sketches a notional map of the entire Mediterranean coastline: how much of it was under Roman control at the time of his speech?
  • What does the clause cum aut hieme aut referto praedonum mari navigaret tell us about ancient sea-faring?
  • How and why does the accusative object of the final sentence (hoc tantum bellum, tam turpe, tam vetus, tam late divisum atque dispersum) rhetorically mirror the subject of the first sentence (testes nunc vero iam omnes orae atque omnes exterae gentes ac nationes, denique maria omnia, cum universa, tum ... omnes sinus atque portus)?
  • Identify and appreciate the magnificent chiasmus in the final sentence.

Stylistic Appreciation:

Analyse the rhetorical design of the first sentence (Testis est ... sinus atque portus): how does its form reinforce its theme?

Discussion Point:

What does the claim ‘Pompey brought the war against the pirates to an end’ imply? How did he do it?

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Suggested Citation

Ingo Gildenhard, Louise Hodgson, et al., Cicero, On Pompey’s Command (De Imperio), 27–49. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2014. ISBN: 978-1-78374-080-2. DCC edition, 2016.https://dcc.dickinson.edu/ja/cicero-de-imperio/31