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 1   T-I|      naivety.~So keep watch on my affairs, I pray you,~in case the
 2  T-II|           he confessed to his own affairs.~Equal and similar licence
 3  T-II|         keep silent about his own affairs.~Hortensius’ and Servius’
 4  T-II|      teaches many maxims for such affairs,~and by what arts a wife
 5 T-III|        greatest of interest in my affairs,~you’ve nothing to fear:
 6  ExII|        The great burden of public affairs occupies his powers:~this
 7  ExII|         he was not involved in my affairs.~I saw him weeping at my ‘
 8   ExI|        fears~that attention to my affairs might harm you.~All your
 9  ExIV|        grace was never slow in my affairs,~your wealth never denied
10  ExIV|      Divine power toys with human affairs, and true ~faith barely
11  ExIV|         Temple,~he’ll be debating affairs fitting for so great a Consul:~
12  ExIV| assistance from it, concerning my affairs.~No matter how slight the
13  ExIV|        hadnt called you to great affairs,~you’d have been the crowning
14   Ind|      divorced her in 45BC and had affairs with Cicero’s son-in-law
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