bold = Main text
   Chap.        grey = Comment text

 1 Themist     |         whom he had had a great friendship. 35 Having arrived here,
 2  Lysand     |      was not attached to him by friendship, or who had not assured
 3   Alcib     |     gained a way to an intimate friendship with him, and seeing that
 4    Dion     | subsisted for a time an assumed friendship between them; and as Dion
 5   Datam     |   exhorted Datames to peace and friendship,141 so that he might again
 6   Datam(141)|                       Peace and friendship with himself, preparatory
 7   Datam     |         distance, he maintained friendship with him; but so that they
 8   Datam     |       was ensnared by pretended friendship. ~
 9   Eumen     |      was admitted into intimate friendship with him; for, even then,
10   Eumen     |        dignity and their former friendship (for he had been intimate
11   Eumen     |         and those who, from old friendship, desired to speak with him
12 Phocion     |     observed the obligations of friendship; for though he had risen
13  Hannib     |        that I would never be in friendship with the Romans, This oath,
14   Attic     |     from Quintus Caecilius; his friendship with Cicero and Hortensius,
15   Attic     |         Octavianus, XIX.----His friendship with Caesar and Antony,
16   Attic     | concluded that, in establishing friendship, similarity of manners has
17   Attic     |     though he lived in intimate friendship with Cicero, and was very
18   Attic     |       boy at school, that their friendship increased even to the end
19   Attic     |     emperor Julius's son, whose friendship he had previously obtained
20   Attic     |         which established their friendship, and rendered their intercourse
21   Attic     |        required to preserve the friendship and favour of those between
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License