Chap.

1  Pausan|    his boyhood, Pausanias had loved with an ardent affection,49
2   Alcib|   dreaded no less than he was loved, lest, elated by good fortune
3    Dion|       any other person,97 and loved him not less than a son.
4    Dion|   Dion so greatly admired and loved, that he devoted himself
5    Dion|     had rather be feared than loved; for those very guards,105
6 Timoleo|    one, he chose rather to be loved than to be feared. He therefore
7   Attic|     to literature; and, as he loved learning himself, he instructed
8   Attic| adapted, though Marcus Cicero loved him above all men, so that
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