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First line is Caesar crossing the Rubicion to re-take Rome for the Romans - "The die is cast".
In this context I think the two cancel each other out
No, the first is referring to a irrevocable course of action, the second how you conduct yourself. Also this was a civil war and Rome was in Roman hands under the Senate and Pompeius Magnus.
But I discovered nothing else but depraved, excessive superstition. Pliny the younger
No, the first is referring to a irrevocable course of action, the second how you conduct yourself. Also this was a civil war and Rome was in Roman hands under the Senate and Pompeius Magnus.
The first point I concede, the second I don't. I know it was a civil war, but history is written by the winners: the former occupants of the Palatine Hill were not doing so on behalf of populus Romani. OK, so Caesar wasn't being entirely altruistic, but conquering heroes rarely are.
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