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 1 Miltiad     |            good conduct than by good fortune, for after he had, by the
 2 Miltiad     |           the words, but by the good fortune of their adversaries, did
 3 Miltiad     |    opportunity, presented them by by fortune, of securing the liberty
 4  Pausan     |              Experiencing equal good fortune in this enterprise, he began
 5   Cimon     |             and who had made a great fortune from the mines, being desirous
 6   Cimon     |            and experienced like good fortune by land on the same day;
 7  Lysand     |        gained, however, more by good fortune |332 than by merit. That
 8   Alcib     |            greater, than those which fortune or nature had bestowed upon
 9   Alcib     |               and their present good fortune, had happened through his
10   Alcib     |          loved, lest, elated by good fortune and great power, he should
11   Alcib     |         revenue. ~But with this good fortune Alcibiades was not content,
12 Thrasib     |            itself, without regard to fortune, I doubt whether I ought
13 Thrasib     |              their soldiers and with fortune; for, in the shock of battle,
14 Thrasib     |      something from the general, and fortune a great deal, and may truly
15 Thrasib     |            of the citizens whom |345 fortune had spared in the war, and
16   Conon     |    inconsiderate in good than in bad fortune; for when he had defeated
17    Dion     |              unexpected success, for fortune, through her fickleness,
18    Dion     |              rowers, with a view, if fortune should baffle his attempts,
19   Chabr     |              seeing Agesilaus's good fortune, and thinking himself in
20  Timoth     |           seen the changeableness of fortune; for the grandson was obliged,
21   Datam     |    prosperous ones to their own good fortune; and hence it happened that
22  Epamin     |           not be married for want of fortune, he used to call a council
23   Pelop     |             to struggle with adverse fortune. He lived in exile, as we
24  Agesil     |      expressed commiseration for the fortune of Greece, since it was
25  Agesil     |        sufficiently admire him. Such fortune attended him, when, at the
26   Eumen     |           great men by merit, not by fortune), but he would have been
27   Eumen     | communication, thought it better, if fortune should so order it, to perish
28 Phocion     |              my expense." ~II. After fortune had continued favourable
29 Timoleo     |          country; builds a temple to Fortune, IV.----Instances of his
30 Timoleo     |       struggled not with one kind of fortune only, and, what is thought
31 Timoleo     |            more discreetly than evil fortune; for when his brother Timophanes,
32 Timoleo     |        therefore erected a temple to Fortune 218 in his own house, and
33 Timoleo(218)|              or will, and applied to Fortune as acting from her own will
34   Kings     |              it with remarkable good fortune, and died at the age of
35  Hannib     |       pretending that he trusted his fortune to |424 their honesty. Having
36  Hannib     |            lived with him as long as fortune allowed, |427 Silenus and
37   Attic     |       thither a great portion of his fortune. Here he lived in such a
38   Attic     |          adviser. It was the gift of fortune, then, in the first place,
39   Attic     |         Cassius, despairing of their fortune, went into exile, into the
40   Attic     |          diminished by the events of fortune, may be called divinity. 269
41   Attic     |          unable after her reverse of fortune to borrow money to discharge
42   Attic     |      practice to be a friend, not to fortune but to men; and when he
43   Attic     |           would commend. On a sudden fortune was changed. When Antony
44   Attic     |             were the vicissitudes of fortune in those days, that sometimes
45   Attic     |          wished to endure no kind of fortune apart from him. But if a
46   Attic     |             involved in the same ill fortune, and caused supplies of
47   Attic     |            was in the height of good fortune. Indulging his liberality
48   Attic     |         Every man's manners make his fortune." Yet he did not study his
49   Attic     |             Yet he did not study his fortune 276 before he formed himself,
50   Attic(276)|            man's manners fashion his fortune, and then speaks of Atticus
51   Attic(276)|              forming himself and his fortune. The word tamen would intimate
52   Attic(276)|              his manners to form his fortune. ~
53   Attic     |           lived unhandsomely, with a fortune of two thousand sestertia,284
54   Attic     |            nor did he, when he had a fortune of a hundred thousand sestertia,285
55   Attic     |             alive. |445  ~XIX. Since fortune has chosen that we should
56   Attic     |           manners that bring him his fortune."290 For Atticus, though
57   Attic(290)|          fortunam.] "Procure him his fortune," make his fortune. As the
58   Attic(290)|           him his fortune," make his fortune. As the mores are, so the
59   Attic(290)|             As the mores are, so the fortune will be. ~
60   Attic     |         equal birth,291 but of lower fortune; for such prosperity attended
61   Attic     |     prosperity attended Caesar, that fortune gave him everything that
62   Attic     |          dignity, than in favour and fortune (for he obtained many legacies
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