bold = Main text
   Liber, Caput     grey = Comment text

 1     Int,       I|       seem that Cicero's love for literature was inherited from his father,
 2     Int,       I|         of letters; compared with literature, politics and oratory held
 3     Int,       I|      Cicero was a mere dabbler in literature, and that his works were
 4     Int,       I|        appetite for every kind of literature was insatiable, and his
 5     Int,       I|   describes himself as "devouring literature" with a marvellous man named
 6     Int,       I|        the son of the Dictator42. Literature formed then, he tells us,
 7     Int,       I|           room for thoughts about literature. The letters which belong
 8     Int,     III|      destitute of a philosophical literature. Philosophy was a sealed
 9     Int,     III|   countrymen, and to enrich their literature. He wished at the same time
10     Int,     III|       been a very large Epicurean literature in Latin, of which all but
11     Int,     III|      whole of the Roman Epicurean literature dealt in an overwhelmingly
12     Int,     III|           wish to remove from the literature of his country the reproach
13     Int,      IV|         in the same department of literature to approach them.... This
14     Int,      IV|    started which touches on Greek literature and philosophy. We are especially
15     Int,      IV|         all conversant with Greek literature or society could fail to
16     Not,       1| Quintilian to mean "department of literature." Ea res: one of Halm's
17     Not,       1|      philosophy into that kind of literature which the unlearned read,
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