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Caesar himself placed a great deal of blame on Lentulus for the events of late 50 / early 49 which brought about the civil war, commenting on the magnitude of Lentulus ' debts and his hopes for control of an army and rich provinces, and going so far as to claim that the Consul was aiming to make himself master of Rome, a second SullaCaesar, < i > B. C .</ i > i. 4.
He was also seen as duplicitous, warning the senate in the debates of January 49 that if they did not declare against Caesar then he, Lentulus, had his own means of regaining Caesar's favour.
Cicero, in a characteristically cutting remark, described Lentulus as being averse to the trouble of thinking < ref > Cicero, < i > Brut .</ i > 268.
Writing of the private interests and personal ambitions of Pompeius ' followers, he seems to give support to Caesar's claims < ref > Cicero, < i > ad Fam .</ i > vi. 6, and his later acerbic comments that Lentulus promised himself Hortensius ' town house, Caesar's suburban villa, and an estate at Baiae as spoils of the civil war do bear out Lentulus ' reputation for avariciousness < ref > Cicero, < i > ad Att .</ i > xi. 6.

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