| CICERO | Marcus Tullius --, 106-43BC, Roman orator and statesman (6) |
| VIRTUE | "Glory follows ___ as if it were its shadow": Marcus Tullius Cicero (6) |
| ORATOR | Text on rhetoric by Marcus Tullius Cicero written in 46 BC |
| LYSIAS | Ancient Greek orator and speech writer whose works include Against Eratosthenes (6) |
| DEMOSTHENES | Greek orator and statesman; sense method (anag.) |
| DEMOSTHENIAN | Relating to a Greek orator and statesman (384-322 BC) (12) |
| TACITUS | Gaius Cornelius, Roman orator and historian whose works include the Annals (7) |
| ALTEREGO | Phrase coined by Roman orator and writer Cicero in the 1st century BC to describe his 'second self' (5,3) |
| NOMEN | Family name, eg the Tullius of Marcus Tullius Cicero |
| WISER | "Nobody can give you ___ advice than yourself": Marcus Tullius Cicero (5) |
| UNCOVER | "Would that I could discover truth as easily as I can ___ falsehood": Marcus Tullius Cicero (7) |
| OCCURRED | "To be ignorant of what _ before you were born is to remain always a child': Marcus Tullius Cicero (8) |
| IDIOT | "Any man can make mistakes, but only an _ persists in his error": Marcus Tullius Cicero (5) |
| CHICKPEA | Foodstuff which is the direct translation of the name of the Roman statesman, orator and writer Cicero (106-43 BC) (8) |
| CATO | -- the Elder or -- the Censor, 234-149BC, Roman statesman, orator and writer (4) |
| PERICLES | Prominent and influential Greek statesman, orator and general of Athens during the Golden Age, subject of a play written at least in part by William Shakespeare |
| TULLY | The former English name for the Roman consul, orator and writer Cicero |
| ISOCRATES | Greek orator and prose writer 436-338BC (9) |
| REX | Servius Tullius, e.g., in ancient Rome |
| SPEAKERS | Stereo sound blasters for the orators and lecturers (8) |