Itaque omnēs nunc in eīs locīs Cn. Pompēium sīcut aliquem nōn ex hāc urbe missum, sed dē caelō dēlāpsum intuentur; nunc dēnique incipiunt crēdere, fuisse hominēs Rōmānōs hāc quondam continentiā, quod iam nātiōnibus exterīs incrēdibile ac falsō memoriae prōditum vidēbātur; nunc imperī vestrī splendor illīs gentibus lūcem adferre coepit; nunc intellegunt nōn sine causā māiōrēs suōs tum, cum eā temperantiā magistrātūs habēbāmus, servīre populō Rōmānō quam imperāre aliīs maluisse. Iam vērō ita facilēs aditūs ad eum prīvātōrum, ita līberae querimōniae dē aliōrum iniūriīs esse dīcuntur, ut is, quī dīgnitāte principibus excellit, facilitāte īnfimīs pār esse videatur.

41: Saint Pompey

The paragraph consists of five sentences, with th first four focusing on Pompey’s temperantia vel continentia (the two terms are virtual synonyms) and the final sentence moving on to Pompey’s facilitas…[full essay]

Study Questions:

  • Parse intuentur.
  • Explain the syntax of the infinitives credere and fuisse.
  • What kind of ablative is hac ... continentia?
  • What is the antecedent of quod?
  • Identify the words in the nominative in the clause quod iam nationibus exteris incredibile ac falso memoriae proditum videbatur.
  • Parse falso and memoriae: why can’t falso modify memoriae?
  • Who is the subject implied in intellegunt?
  • Explain the tense of videbatur.
  • In the cum-clause cum ea temperantia magistratus habebamus: who is the subject? What kind of ablative is ea temperantia? What case is magistratus?
  • What kind of ablatives are dignitate and facilitate?
  • What is the significance of the word delapsum? What impression does it give of Pompey?
  • Who are the ancestors of the Eastern people who preferred to be subject to the Romans to ruling others?
  • Discuss the way in which Cicero intertwines Pompey’s dignitas (‘social rank and standing in the community’) and his facilitas (‘accessibility’) in the last sentence of the paragraph: why does he stress facilitas so much?

Stylistic Appreciation:

Discuss how Cicero employs the temporal adverbs quondam, iam and nunc in his argument.

Discussion Point:

Can you think of contemporary public figures who combine dignitas with facilitas?

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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/ro/cicero-de-imperio/41