[1] Cf. De Oratore, I. 23; 52; 105; 146; 198; II. 50; 77; 100; 132; III. 29-33; 48; 54; 93; 226; Ad. Att. iv. 16.3; Brutus, 263.
[2] De Oratore iii. 29-33; Brutus 202, 212, 276, 286, Orator 99, 143.
[3] Brutus 315, 316.
[4] Sir John Mandeville.
[5] Nettleship, Essays Classical, II, 93; Norden Die antike Kunstprosa (which seriously overestimates the influence of Greek doctrine on Latin prose style). Cicero’s Brutus is the indispensable handbook.
[6] Cf. e.g. C.I.L. I. 60, 366, 561.
[7] The imperial copy is probably accurate except for a few words, Class. Phil. 1919, 74.
[8] Ed. Vahlen. Professor Rand’s translation may be found in Founders of the Middle Ages (Harvard University Press, 1928), 56.
[9] De Orat. ii, 51, 59.
[10] As for instance Norden, op. cit. I, 164 ff.