“To the Senate,” “To the People,” and his Pleadings every one.
You may see the order follows the best editorial school:
No appearance could more justly please the eye.
’Tis printed here in Venice, ’neath the noble Moro’s rule;
Who Cicero reads no other road to eloquence need try.
1471. Lodo. Carbo.
After 1471 Valdarfer moved from Venice to Milan, where books from his press began to appear in 1474. Adam of Ammergau made some original contributions to the poetical tradition, but in his 1472 edition of Cicero’s Orations conveyed, and very clumsily, a couplet from Valdarfer’s edition of the previous year:
Hoc ingens Ciceronis opus, causasque forenses
Quas inter patres dixit et in populo,