bold = Main text
   Chap.        grey = Comment text

 1 Miltiad     |          but are now costly and common, so we find that it formerly
 2 Themist     |       at liberty to take by the common law of nations; nor had
 3 Aristid     |        joined in command of the common fleet of Greece with Pausanias,
 4 Aristid     |       they fixed upon to be the common treasury; but all this money
 5   Alcib     |         animosity more than the common advantage. By his advice,
 6   Alcib     |          in the presence of the common soldiers, began to assert,75
 7 Thrasib     |      such actions, however, are common to commanders with their
 8    Dion     | extolled to the skies. |356 The common people, however, when the
 9   Chabr     |         populace. For this is a common fault in great and free
10  Timoth(123)|         Gebhard. Previously the common reading was Ericthonem,
11   Datam(136)|       ad, &c. Most of the older common editions have qui nondum
12   Datam     |       equipments and dress of a common soldier, prepared to march
13   Datam     |   mutual kindnesses, but by the common hatred which they had conceived
14  Epamin     |      thought all things were in common between him and his friends;
15   Pelop     |    being thus effected, and the common people being summoned to
16  Agesil(186)|      the latter is the far more common form. ~
17   Attic     |        means he could. When the common people, in consequence of
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