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 1   Attic     |      offends neither Pompey nor Caesar, VII.----After Caesar is
 2   Attic     |       nor Caesar, VII.----After Caesar is killed, he supplies Brutus
 3   Attic     |    XVIII.----His connexion with Caesar Octavianus, XIX.----His
 4   Attic     |             His friendship with Caesar and Antony, XX.----His last
 5   Attic     |         old, the civil war with Caesar broke out; but he availed
 6   Attic     |       his great disgust. But to Caesar the neutrality of Atticus
 7   Attic     |         on the assassination of Caesar, the commonwealth seemed
 8   Attic     |    knights for the assassins of Caesar; a scheme which they thought
 9   Attic(265)|         and Cassius for killing Caesar. Gebhard supports Savaro,
10   Attic(265)|        particularly for killing Caesar, for they were not the only
11   Attic(268)|       dispute about the will of Caesar, in which Octavius had been
12   Attic(274)|    Imperatorum.] The triumvirs, Caesar, Antony, and Lepidus. At
13   Attic     |     closest intimacy with young Caesar, though, through his own
14   Attic     |    through his own interest and Caesar's influence, he had power
15   Attic     |        such prosperity attended Caesar, that fortune gave him everything
16   Attic     | daughter in her maidenhood; and Caesar betrothed her, when she
17   Attic     |        this connexion, however, Caesar not only, when he was absent
18   Attic     |        through age and neglect, Caesar, on the suggestion of Atticus,
19   Attic     |      was sure to happen between Caesar and Antony, when each of
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