Et quoniam auctōritās quoque in bellīs administrandīs multum atque in imperiō mīlitārī valet, certē nēminī dubium est, quīn eā rē īdem ille imperātor plurimum possit. Vehementer autem pertinēre ad bella administranda, quid hostēs, quid sociī dē imperātōribus nostrīs exīstiment, quis ignōrat, cum sciāmus hominēs, in tantīs rēbus ut aut contemnant aut metuant aut ōderint aut ament, opīniōne nōn minus et fāmā quam aliquā ratiōne certā commovērī? Quod igitur nōmen umquam in orbe terrārum clārius fuit? cuius rēs gestae parēs? Dē quō homine vōs, id quod maximē facit auctōritātem, tanta et tam praeclāra iūdicia fēcistis?

43: Rumour and renown: Pompey’s auctoritas

Cicero here reaches the third of the four qualities that distinguish his perfect general: auctoritas...[full essay]

Study Questions:

  • Explain the grammar and syntax of multum and plurimum.
  • What kind of ablative is ea re?
  • Identify the subject accusative and the infinitive of the indirect statement introduced by ignorat.
  • Identify and explain the mood of existiment.
  • What kind of clause does ut introduce?
  • What kind of ablative are opinione, fama, and ratione?
  • Identify the subject accusative and the infinitive of the indirect statement introduced by sciamus.
  • Parse clarius.
  • What verb form has to be supplied in the clause cuius res gestae pares?
  • What is auctoritas? How does it differ from potestas or imperium? Is Cicero right to claim that the reputation/prestige of the general matters in warfare?

Stylistic Appreciation:

In the indirect statement dependent on sciamus Cicero switches into an ‘anthropological register’ with a statement about how humans behave in extreme situations. What is the rhetorical effect of this switch?

Discussion Point:

Can you think of figures in your life who are formally invested with power of one sort or another because of their social role or office (= potestas) but have little or no auctoritas (‘commanding respect’) – or, conversely, of individuals who do not possess any formal powers but nevertheless command respect and obedience? How would you explain this?

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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/cicero-de-imperio/43