Catilinae Coniuratio
Sallust
Sallust. Sallust, Florus, and Velleius Paterculus. Watson, J. S. (John Selby), translator. London: Harper and Brothers, 1899.
He accordingly dispatched Caius Manlius to Fæsulæ, and the adjacent parts of Etruria; one Septimius, of Camerinum,[*](XXVI. Of Camnerinum] Camertem. "' That is, a native of Camerinum, a town on the confines of Umbria and Picenum. Hence the noun Camers, as Cic. Pro. Syll., c. 19, in agro Camerti." Cortius.) into the Picenian territory; Caius Julius into Apulia; and others to various places, wherever he thought each would be most serviceable.[*](Wherever he thought each would be most serviceable] Ubi quemque opportunum credebat. "Propriè reddas: quem, et ubi ilium, opportunum credebat." Cortius. See c. 23.) He himself, in the mean time, was making many simultaneous efforts at Rome; he laid plots for the consul; he arranged schemes for burning the city; he