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 1     Pre         |       edition of Cicero's works by himself and Kayser. In a very few
 2     Pre         |       student might illustrate for himself a Latin usage, if it were
 3     Int,       I|           mind, and he surrendered himself wholly, as he tells us,
 4     Int,       I|           81 B.C., Cicero employed himself incessantly with the study
 5     Int,       I|           that of Plutarch. Cicero himself, even when mentioning his
 6     Int,       I|             By the advice of Philo himself15, Cicero attended the lectures
 7     Int,       I|           and at Rhodes he devoted himself chiefly to rhetoric, under
 8     Int,       I|         his eastern campaigns, put himself to much trouble31; as a
 9     Int,       I|          the year 56, he describes himself as "devouring literature"
10     Int,       I|            the Peripatetics he had himself heard, and indeed equal
11     Int,       I|          to leave some memorial of himself at the beautiful city, and
12     Int,       I|        time with the Scipio he had himself drawn in the De Republica59;
13     Int,       I| deliberates about the course he is himself to take, he naturally recals
14     Int,       I|           his days in arguing with himself a string of abstract philosophical
15     Int,      II|           all other schools. As he himself says, the doctrine that
16     Int,      II|         aim, with Socrates, to rid himself and others of the mists
17     Int,      II|          charged with constituting himself the champion of an exploded
18     Int,      II|     physics, Cicero often believed himself to be following Aristotle.
19     Int,     III|          praise for not abandoning himself to idleness or worse, as
20     Int,     III|            as he does for devoting himself to philosophy, and a careless
21     Int,      IV|          later letter he expresses himself satisfied with the advance
22     Int,      IV|           Atticus, Cicero declared himself very much dissatisfied with
23     Int,      IV|           making the interlocutors himself, Varro and Atticus178. The
24     Int,      IV|          correspondence with Varro himself. Etiquette seems to have
25     Int,      IV|          elder man as speaking for himself, but in that case, as in
26     Int,      IV|          xlv] compelled to exclude himself from the conversation209.
27     Int,      IV|         closely did Cicero suppose himself to be allied to Catulus,
28     Int,      IV|                he does not declare himself a follower of that philosopher,
29     Int,      IV|           that he had never placed himself under the instruction of
30     Int,      IV|        Catulus evidently concerned himself more with the system of
31     Int,      IV|         orator of the partyCicero himself. These conjectures have
32     Int,      IV|  Hortensius was answered by Cicero himself. If my view of the preceding
33     Int,      IV|           obliged to translate for himself267. The more the matter
34     Int,      IV|     Catulus were, doubtless, Philo himself and Clitomachus.~In that
35     Int,      IV|           not definitely committed himself to sceptical principles.
36     Not,       1|           for it, while he devotes himself to subjects which the Greeks
37     Not,       1|        gives reasons why he should himself make the attempt, and instancing
38     Not,       1|          for the New. Cic. defends himself, and appeals to Philo for
39     Not,       1|            the gloss hunters, here himself scented a miserable gloss;
40     Not,       1|     sequence of tenses, which Halm himself allows to be broken in two
41     Not,       1|         Cicero's time, so by Varro himself (from Antiochus) in Aug.
42     Not,       1|          recreate the world out of himself, since he is beyond the
43     Not,       1|          miror) would not eulogise himself quite so unblushingly, Goer.
44     Not,       1|           R. and P. and Zeller for himself. I can only treat such points
45     Not,       1|       substances. He always guards himself from assigning a material
46     Not,       1|      Aristotle! Arist. had guarded himself by saying that the soul
47     Not,       2|        Antiochus and read much for himself (4). Those enemies of Greek
48     Not,       2|             This Lucullus believed himself able to do, although the
49     Not,       2|        Academics, though Antiochus himself claimed the title. Aristo:
50     Not,       2|            therefore Philo deluded himself with words, there was nothing
51     Not,       2|         left dialectic and devoted himself to ethics. What is important
52     Not,       2|           never seems to have made himself the defender of the new
53     Not,       2|            in pain when he fancied himself in pleasure, and vice versa;
54     Not,       2|    arguments drawn from Chrysippus himself (87). You said that the
55     Not,       2|             he establishes against himself not merely that he has told
56     Not,       2|         the last use Cic. condemns himself in Orat. 85. Inquit: "quotha,"
57     Not,       2|           physicum se voluit "gave himself out to be a physical philosopher:"
58     Not,       2|    thinking of the use to which he himself had put these Stoic paradoxes
59     Not,       2|            which he half confesses himself ashamed in D.F. IV. 74.
60     Not,       2|        Catulus might well describe himself as formally approving (comprobans).
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