Historia Augusta, 6:
Life of Avidius Cassius 3.4 (tr. David Magie):
Such was his character, then, that sometimes he seemed stern and savage, sometimes mild and gentle, often devout and again scornful of sacred things, addicted to drink and also temperate, a lover of eating yet able to endure hunger, a devotee of Venus and a lover of chastity.
fuit his moribus, ut nonnumquam trux et asper videretur, aliquando mitis et lenis, saepe religiosus, alias contemptor sacrorum, avidus vini item abstinens, cibi adpetens et inediae patiens, Veneris cupidus et castitatis amator.
See Thomas Wiedemann, "The Figure of Catiline in the
Historia Augusta,"
Classical Quarterly 29.2 (1979) 479-484 (esp. 482-483), who remarks (at 480, footnotes omitted):
Men who were not straightforwardly black or white were rather a problem for
educated Romans. Popular moral philosophy assumed that a man's character
(physis, natura) never normally changed: the Lives of Plutarch are perhaps the
most obvious expression of this widespread attitude. But this was not just a
philosophical postulate. During their years at school, Romans had not merely
read through with their grammaticus innumerable character-sketches in historians
and orators which were little more than lists of either good or bad qualities; they
had formally learnt at the rhetorician's school the framework into which any
conceivable person would have to be fitted if he was going to be mentioned in a
speech, either positively or negatively. We can see this (for example) from Cicero's
summary of the 'laudandi vituperandique rationes' in the Partitiones Oratoriae,
or Quintilian's scheme 'de laude ac vituperatione'.
After this kind of education, any figure who combined positive and negative
qualities was bound to be a problem...
Related post:
A Bundle of Contradictions.