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 1 Miltiad     |        showed himself a greater friend to the general liberty than
 2 Themist     |       me no less deserving as a friend than your father found me
 3   Alcib     |  feelings as Alcibiades, was no friend to the power of the people,
 4   Alcib     |         be attached to him as a friend; nor did he doubt that he
 5   Alcib     |       him) the side-weapon of a friend of his; for there was with
 6   Datam     | apprehended no treachery from a friend, he almost lost his life,
 7   Datam     |       of the king's treasury, a friend to Datames, sent him an
 8  Epamin     |      marriageable daughter of a friend could not be married for
 9  Agesil     |         Xenophon as an intimate friend. ~In his early days he had
10   Eumen     |     Cappadocia, and is a steady friend to Perdiccas, II.----His
11   Eumen(189)|        name is from e3tairoj, a friend or companion, either because
12   Eumen     |      all, yet did not forsake a friend, or show himself more desirous
13   Eumen     |       man who had once been his friend." Eumenes, however, after
14   Attic     |       Roman knight, an intimate friend of Lucius Lucullus, a rich
15   Attic     |   himself, who was his intimate friend, he gave no offence; for
16   Attic     |      Caius Flavius, an intimate friend of Brutus, to consent to
17   Attic     |        was his practice to be a friend, not to fortune but to men;
18   Attic     |         in conjunction with his friend; so that it might appear
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