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  1     Int,       I     |            the latter, such as Piso, Varro, Lucullus and Brutus, more
  2     Int,       I     |              the single exception of Varro. One of his letters to Atticus38
  3     Int,       I     |               In a letter written to Varro in that year65, he says "
  4     Int,       I     |             the remaining letters to Varro and also to Sulpicius67.
  5     Int,      II     |           Cicero is there charged by Varro with having deserted the
  6     Int,      IV     |             at Tusculum was one from Varro166.~On the 23rd July, Cicero
  7     Int,      IV     |          work should be dedicated to Varro, or if not the Academica,
  8     Int,      IV     |              been very intimate with Varro: their acquaintance seems
  9     Int,      IV     |            works for some mention of Varro171. The nature of the works
 10     Int,      IV     |          comply with the request172. Varro had promised on his side,
 11     Int,      IV     |          very much dissatisfied with Varro's failure to fulfil his
 12     Int,      IV     |             work. His complaint that Varro had been writing for two
 13     Int,      IV     |              promised to transfer to Varro the Academica, allowing
 14     Int,      IV     |            Academica would just suit Varro, who was a follower of Antiochus,
 15     Int,      IV     |           the interlocutors himself, Varro and Atticus178. The position
 16     Int,      IV     |            of dedicating the work to Varro. He frequently throws the
 17     Int,      IV     |             said: "I am in favour of Varro, and the more so because
 18     Int,      IV     |                 Cicero, then, feared Varro's temper, and perhaps his
 19     Int,      IV     |              was his doubt as to how Varro would receive the dedication184.
 20     Int,      IV     |         repeatedly communicated with Varro, and to have assured Cicero
 21     Int,      IV     |        friend, Atticus affirmed that Varro was jealous of some to whom
 22     Int,      IV     |         point: was it Brutus of whom Varro was jealous? It seems strange
 23     Int,      IV     |             into correspondence with Varro himself. Etiquette seems
 24     Int,      IV     |            the presentation copy for Varro received great attention,
 25     Int,      IV     |              it would meet with from Varro. He wrote thus to Atticus: "
 26     Int,      IV     |            Rome and send the work to Varro, should it be judged advisable
 27     Int,      IV     |         wrote to say that as soon as Varro came to Rome the books would
 28     Int,      IV     |           bold enough, then, to give Varro the books? I await his judgment
 29     Int,      IV     |             when will he read them?" Varro probably received the books
 30     Int,      IV     |         edition had already got into Varro's hands, as we learn from
 31     Int,      IV     |           Cicero begs Atticus to ask Varro to make some alterations
 32     Int,      IV     |       corresponding to the speech of Varro in the beginning of the
 33     Int,      IV     |             it was necessary to make Varro speak first and not second
 34     Int,      IV     |            he takes in his answer to Varro, part of which is preserved
 35     Int,      IV     |              letter of dedication to Varro, describes his own part
 36     Int,      IV     |            the [lvii] place given to Varro in the second edition276.
 37     Int,      IV(287)|                                      Varro, De Re Rust. III. 17.~
 38     Int,      IV     |           dedicated the Academica to Varro, very slight alterations
 39     Int,      IV     |       Hortensius' villa at Bauli291. Varro's villa, at which the scene
 40     Int,      IV     |      Academica, it can be shown that Varro, Cicero and Atticus could
 41     Int,      IV     | impossibility would at once occur to Varro, and Cicero anticipates
 42     Int,      IV     |                For the main facts of Varro's life the student must
 43     Int,      IV     |             first mention we have of Varro in any of Cicero's writings
 44     Int,      IV     |          friendship between the two. Varro had done the orator some
 45     Int,      IV     |         Atticus Cicero had eulogised Varro; and in the letter to which
 46     Int,      IV     |              he begs Atticus to send Varro the eulogy to read, adding "
 47     Int,      IV     |                All the references to Varro in the letters to Atticus
 48     Int,      IV     |           had to be pressed to write Varro a letter of thanks for supposed
 49     Int,      IV     |         Cicero refused to believe in Varro's zeal, as reported by Atticus299.
 50     Int,      IV     |            return from exile, he and Varro remained in the same semi-friendly
 51     Int,      IV     |           Pompeian cause, Cicero and Varro do seem to have been drawn
 52     Int,      IV     |       offence to the harsh temper of Varro, and a humility in presence
 53     Int,      IV(300)|          only letters from Cicero to Varro preserved in our collections.~
 54     Int,      IV     |           The philosophical views of Varro can be gathered with tolerable
 55     Int,      IV     |       considerably from, the work of Varro De Philosophia302. Beyond
 56     Int,      IV     |            Cicero of having mistaken Varro's philosophical views. This
 57     Int,      IV     |        Lingua Latina, concluded that Varro had passed over to the Stoics
 58     Int,      IV     |       written. All that was Stoic in Varro came from Antiochus303.~
 59     Int,      IV     |    necessitated by the dedication to Varro, will be more conveniently
 60     Int,      IV     |          given by Hortensius, now by Varro; then the historical justification
 61     Int,      IV     |               Book III.: a speech of Varro in reply to Cicero, closely
 62     Int,      IV     |            the subject-matter of the Varro is certainly prior, logically,
 63       I,       I     |            ego: Ista quidem, inquam, Varro, iam diu exspectans, non
 64       I,     III     |             ego. Sunt, inquam, ista, Varro. Nam nos in nostra urbe
 65       I,      IV     |          consedimus [omnes].~15. Tum Varro ita exorsus est: Socrates
 66       I,       V     |              Tu vero, inquit, perge, Varro: valde enim amo nostra atque
 67       I,     VII     |        conamur? 26. Tu vero, inquam, Varro, bene etiam meriturus mihi
 68       I,     XII     |          exposita est, inquam, a te, Varro, et veteris Academiae ratio
 69       I,     XII     |           disciplinam putandam. Tunc Varro: Tuae sunt nunc partes,
 70       I,     III     |           Putsch.: p. 377, ed. Keil. Varro ad Ciceronem tertio fixum
 71       I,    IIII     |       Academicis: latent ista omnia, Varro, magnis obscurata et circumfusa
 72     Not,       1     |                 114. Summary. Cic., Varro and Atticus meet at Cumae (
 73     Not,       1     |             after adroitly reminding Varro that the promised dedication
 74     Not,       1     |        towards philosophy, by asking Varro why he leaves this subject
 75     Not,       1     |            subject untouched (2, 3). Varro thinks philosophy written
 76     Not,       1     |        success of Brutus, again begs Varro to write on philosophy (
 77     Not,       1     |          write on philosophy (912). Varro putting the request on one
 78     Not,       1     |             in harmony with the Old. Varro refers to Antiochus as an
 79     Not,       1     |         between Antiochus and Philo. Varro agrees, and promises an
 80     Not,       1     |           Noster: our common friend. Varro was much more the friend
 81     Not,       1     |            51. A M. Varrone: from M. Varro's house news came. Audissemus:
 82     Not,       1     |           magnify his attachment for Varro. Ab eius villa: the prep
 83     Not,       1     |            intense desire to flatter Varro. Si qui ... si essent: the
 84     Not,       1     |           Praeconinus, the master of Varro, and the earliest systematic
 85     Not,       1     |            Considerable fragments of Varro's Menippean Satires remain,
 86     Not,       1     |           and is followed by Baiter. Varro is thus made to say that
 87     Not,       1     |               Ad Att. XIII. 48 where Varro's are mentioned. †Philosophe
 88     Not,       1     |            Civ. Dei VI. 3) describes Varro's "Libri Antiquitatum" (
 89     Not,       1     |          Manut. reads rebus from 26. Varro's researches into the Latin
 90     Not,       1     |              Multis locis incohasti: Varro's book "De Philosophia"
 91     Not,       1     |            Philosophy. First part of Varro's Exposition, 1518. Summary.
 92     Not,       1     |             10, D.F. V. 87, 88, also Varro in Aug. De Civ. Dei, VIII.
 93     Not,       1     |              De Rep. I. 16 (cf. also Varro in Aug. De Civ. Dei, VIII.
 94     Not,       1     |        broken by Polemo's pupils; so Varro says (from Antiochus) in
 95     Not,       1     |             this appears, as also in Varro (in Aug. as above) who often
 96     Not,       1     |         above. Cic. does not observe Varro's distinction (De L. L.
 97     Not,       1     |              philosophia in the nom. Varro, however, would never say
 98     Not,       1     |            set of definite rules, so Varro in Aug. (as above) speaks
 99     Not,       1     |              7.~§§1923. Part II. of Varro's Exposition: Antiochus'
100     Not,       1     |              in Cicero's time, so by Varro himself (from Antiochus)
101     Not,       1     |       compared with our passage, and Varro in Aug. XIX. 3. The root
102     Not,       1     |            to point it out in Plato; Varro seems to merge the two last
103     Not,       1     |           virtue is also asserted by Varro in Aug. XIX. 3, cf. also
104     Not,       1     |            mundana from T.D. V. 108, Varro, however, has humana societas
105     Not,       1     |            Antiochus. At all events, Varro's report (Aug. De Civ. Dei
106     Not,       1     |            Ea sunt maxima: so Stob., Varro in Aug. passim. Sensit:
107     Not,       1     |             33.~§§2429. Part III of Varro's Exposition. Antiochus'
108     Not,       1     |             59.~§§3032. Part iv. of Varro's Exposition: Antiochus'
109     Not,       1     |              so explained (Top. 35). Varro translated ετυμολογια by
110     Not,       1     |        ρητορικη.~§§3342. Part v. of Varro's exposition: the departures
111     Not,       1     |          after Aristoteles, supposes Varro's speech to begin here.
112     Not,       1     |          here. To the objection that Varro (who in 8 says nihil enim
113     Not,       1     |            meant for Antiochus, whom Varro is copying. Aristoteles:
114     Not,       1     |             igitur, which H. adopts. Varro's resumption of his exposition
115     Not,       1     |              the strong statement of Varro in Aug. XIX. 1 nulla est
116     Not,       1     |        repeatedly taken place during Varro's exposition, and for which
117     Not,       2     |               12. This forms part of Varro's answer to Cicero, which
118     Not,       2     |         Puteoli was not visible from Varro's villa on the Lucrine.~
119     Not,       2     |          heart was doubtless used by Varro as an argument in favour
120     Not,       2     |             well have formed part of Varro's explanation of the καταληψις,
121     Not,       2     |           assigns this to the end of Varro's speech in the third Book.
122     Not,       2     |              for its transference to Varro I prefer to regard it as
123     Not,       2     |            adopted by a M. Terentius Varro, and was a man of distinction
124     Not,       2     |              in Gellius XVI. 8 (from Varro) prologium. Aut verum esse
125     Not,       2     |              1 neque enim existimat (Varro) ullam philosophiae sectam
126     Not,       2     |              of weighing anchor, and Varro De Re Rust. III. 17, 1,
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