[Life of Cicero by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
Life of Cicero

CHAPTER VIII
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CHAPTER VIII.
_CICERO AS CONSUL._ Hitherto everything had succeeded with Cicero.

His fortune and his fame had gone hand-in-hand.

The good-will of the citizens had been accorded to him on all possible occasions.

He had risen surely, if not quickly, to the top of his profession, and had so placed himself there as to have torn the wreath from the brow of his predecessor and rival, Hortensius.
On no memorable occasion had he been beaten.

If now and then he had failed to win a cause in which he was interested, it was as to some matter in which, as he had said to Atticus in speaking of his contemplated defence of Catiline, he was not called on to break his heart if he were beaten.


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