bold = Main text
  Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

1     Int,       I| surrendered himself wholly, as he tells us, to the brilliant Academic.9
2     Int,       I|          of affection, and Cicero tells us that he read his works
3     Int,       I|        Literature formed then, he tells us, his solace and support,
4     Int,      IV|          given in the letters. He tells us that it extended, on
5     Int,      IV|        later speech, he expressly tells us that such sceptical paradoxes
6     Not,       2|     Sextus Pyrr. Hyp. I. 235, who tells us that while the Carneadeans
7     Not,       2|         comprehend. Sextus indeed tells us that he held things to
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