Quae fuit igitur causa cūr cūncta cīvitās Lampsacēnōrum dē contiōne, quem ad modum tūte scrībis, domum tuam concurreret? Tū enim neque in litterīs quās Nerōnī mittis, neque in testimōniō causam tantī tumultūs ostendis ūllam. Obsessum tē dīcis, ignem adlātum, sarmenta circumdata, līctōrem tuum occīsum esse dīcis, prōdeundī tibi in pūblicum potestātem factam negās: causam huius tantī terrōris occultās. Nam sī quam Rubrius iniūriam suō nōmine ac nōn impulsū tuō et tuā cupiditāte fēcisset, dē tuī comitis iniūriā questum ad tē potius quam tē oppugnātum venīrent. Cum igitur quae causa illīus tumultūs fuerit testēs ā nōbīs prōductī dīxerint, ipse cēlārit, nōnne causam hanc quam nōs prōposuimus cum illōrum testimōnia tum istīus taciturnitās perpetua cōnfirmat?

After Cicero has established once more what has happened, he proceeds to explore once again why the Lampsacenes acted as they did. The key term of the paragraph, then, is causa. . . [full essay]

Grammar and Syntax:

  • What type of ablative is a nobis?

Style and Theme:

  • Explore how Cicero operates with the word causa in this paragraph.
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Suggested Citation

Ingo Gildenhard, Cicero, Against Verres, 2.1.53–86. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2011. ISBN: 978-1-90692-463-8. DCC edition, 2016. https://dcc.dickinson.edu/cicero-verres/80