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   Liber, Caput          grey = Comment text

 1     Pre              |        readily got from existing books; next, to provide a good
 2     Pre              |      with the Academica. The two books chiefly referred to in my
 3     Pre              |      this work are quoted. These books, with Madvig's De Finibus,
 4     Int,       I     |        affairs, and his love for books, to which he looks as the
 5     Int,       I     |   extempore paraphrases of Greek books half understood. In truth,
 6     Int,       I     |          his best collections of books were. At this time was written
 7     Int,       I     |   Atticus had pointed out in the books De Republica54. His wishes
 8     Int,       I     |      that he was really a man of books; by nothing but accident
 9     Int,       I     |   nothing was long to his taste; books, letters, study, all in
10     Int,       I     |          with my old friends, my books." These gave him real comfort,
11     Int,     III     |          first to write, and his books seem to have had an enormous
12     Int,     III     |          most cared, praised the books, and many were incited both
13     Int,      IV     |       the senate. A grief, which books and solitude could scarcely
14     Int,      IV(150)|         mention of the first two books.~
15     Int,      IV     |     having copied the whole five books while in that state153.
16     Int,      IV     |          they are simply the two books, entitled Catulus and Lucullus,
17     Int,      IV     |         characters from whom the books took their names were extolled.
18     Int,      IV     |         he now divided into four books instead of two, making the
19     Int,      IV     |       self love deceives me, the books have been so finished that
20     Int,      IV     |         but Cicero left the four books in Atticus' power, promising
21     Int,      IV     |        as Varro came to Rome the books would be sent to him. "By
22     Int,      IV     |          then, to give Varro the books? I await his judgment upon
23     Int,      IV     |      Varro probably received the books in the first fortnight of
24     Int,      IV     |          edition the one in four books. He did so in a passage
25     Int,      IV     |      mentioned the number of the books as four201. That he wished
26     Int,      IV     |      frequently quoted. The four books are expressly referred to
27     Int,      IV     |  Throughout the second and third books he is treated as the lettered
28     Int,      IV     |         his information [l] from books and especially from the
29     Int,      IV     |    Academic doctrine. The famous books of Philo were probably not
30     Int,      IV     |          by a mention of Philo's books249. Some considerable portion
31     Int,      IV     |         the contents of the four books. Book I.: the historico-philosophical
32     Not,       1     |          83), the title of their books on the subject preserved
33     Not,       1     |         is αλογος επαρσις. (T.D. Books III. and IV. treat largely
34     Not,       2     |        at or about 63.~UNCERTAIN BOOKS.~32. I have already said
35     Not,       2     |      holding that the whole four books formed one discussion, finished
36     Not,       2     |         attack in Book IV. As to Books III. and IV., I do not think
37     Not,       2     | Antiochus. At that very time the books mentioned by Catulus yesterday
38     Not,       2     |    inference is still treated in books on logic, cf. Thomson's
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