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stertia) the coincidence of this sum with that mentioned in Catul. 103.1 suggests that the two epigrams concern the same event. decoctoris Formiani: i.e. Mamurra, whose native city was Formiae (cf. Catul. 57.4; Hor. S. 1.5.37), and who is scored in Catul. 29.1ff. for squandering his ancestral estates and the large gifts of his patrons, cf. Catul. 43.5 propinqui: etc. early legislation in Rome provided for investigation into the question of a person's sanity, and for the interests of relatives in such a case; cf. Leg. XII Tab. ap. Cic. de Inv. 2.50.148 Si furiosus escit, adgnatum gentiliumque in eo pecuniaque eius potestas esto ; Hor. S. 2.3.217 interdicto huic omne adimat ius praetor et ad sanos abeat tutela propinquos. nec rogare: etc
Formiae (Italy) (search for this): text comm, poem 41
see Intr. 74.—Date, 60-58 B.C. (cf. introductory note to 43)—Meter, Phalaecean. tota: emphatic cf. Verg. A. 1.272 ter centum totos annos. milia decem: sc. sestertium (= decem sestertia) the coincidence of this sum with that mentioned in Catul. 103.1 suggests that the two epigrams concern the same event. decoctoris Formiani: i.e. Mamurra, whose native city was Formiae (cf. Catul. 57.4; Hor. S. 1.5.37), and who is scored in Catul. 29.1ff. for squandering his ancestral estates and the large gifts of his patrons, cf. Catul. 43.5 propinqui: etc. early legislation in Rome provided for investigation into the question of a person's sanity, and for the interests of relatives in such a case; cf. Leg. XII Tab. ap. Cic. de Inv. 2.50.148 Si furiosus escit, adgnatu<