Hieronymus is frequently mentioned by
Cicero, who tells us that he held the highest good to consist in freedom from pain and trouble, and denied that pleasure was to be sought for its own sake. There are quotations from his writings, and from his letters.
Diogenes Laërtius mentions two works:
On Suspense of Judgement and
Scattered Notes. It would seem from Cicero, compared with
Rufinus, that he was the same as the Hieronymus who wrote on
numbers and
feet. He may also have been the author of a work on poets, and a commentary on the
Aspis of
Hesiod. ==Notes==