bold = Main text
  Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

1     Int,       I|      working his hardest for the consulship, his heart was given to
2     Int,       I|         62 released him from the consulship and enabled him to indulge
3     Int,       I| philosophy35; the history of his consulship, in Latin and Greek, the
4     Int,       I|   Aristotle; and the poem on his consulship, of which some fragments
5     Int,      IV|      wrote in honour of Cicero's consulship, lived in the house of the
6     Int,      IV|       younger. Cicero's glorious consulship was once more lauded, and
7     Int,      IV|         63, the year of Cicero's consulship, which is alluded to in
8     Not,       2|      triumph till just before my consulship. What I owed to him in those
9     Not,       2|    famous oath at the end of his consulship.~§66. Turpissimum: cf. I.
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