N.P.O.
- Octavius, comes to Rome, ii., [181];
- meets Cicero, ibid.;
- quarrels with Antony, [204];
- feared by Cicero, [205] ;
- would he be Consul, [232];
- marches into Rome, ibid.;
- his enmity to Cicero, [233];
- his insolence, [237];
- is reconciled to Antony, ibid.;
- the meeting in the island at Bologna, [238];
- his conduct, ibid.;
- letter to him, supposed from Cicero,
but a forgery, [240].
- Officiis, De, ii., [205], [252];
- perfect treatise on morals, [314].
- "O fortunatam natam," i., [277].
- "Old Mortality," torture as there described, i., [88].
- Oppianicus, his life, i., [179].
- Oppius Publius, his trial, i., [126].
- Optimates, Pompey their leader, i., [175].
- Optimo Genere Oratorum, De, ii., [251],
[264].
- Orations, how Cicero treated his own, i., [167].
- Oratiuncula, twelve consular speeches so called, i., [190].
- Orator, The, ii., [251];
- graced by the name of Brutus, [266].
- Oratore, De, Cicero's dialogues, ii., [38];
- OratoriƦ Partitiones, ii., [145],
[265].
- Oratory, Cicero's three modes of speaking, i., [94];
- Ornament, Greek taste for, i., [154].
- Otho's law, speech concerning, i., [190], [204].