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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2019
(1) 1.21:
ex quo, quia suum cuiusque fit eorum quae natura fuerant communia quod cuique obtigit, id quisque teneat; †e quo si quis† sibi appetet, uiolabit ius humanae societatis.
1 Winterbottom, M., M. Tulli Ciceronis De officiis (Oxford, 1994)Google Scholar.
2 Müller, C.F.W., M. Tulli Ciceronis De officiis libri tres für den Schulgebrauch erklärt (Leipzig, 1882)Google Scholar, ad loc.
3 The presence of the reading in these two witnesses suggests that it may have been the reading of L (London, Harley 2716) and thus be Carolingian; cf. Winterbottom (n. 1), viii–ix.
4 For discussion, see Dyck, A.R., A Commentary on Cicero, De officiis (Ann Arbor, 1996), 164–5Google Scholar.
5 So already Pohlenz, M., Antikes Führertum: Cicero De officiis und das Lebensideal des Panaitios (Leipzig and Berlin, 1934), 36 n. 3Google Scholar.
6 See TLL 10.2.1612.10–19. The usage of Sil. Pun. 15.495–6 (belloque parata | prodigere in bellum) is dubiously relevant to Cicero.
7 See further TLL 7.2.1291.11–45; OLD s.v. liberalis 4.
8 I would like to thank this journal's reader for helpful suggestions.