|    Part, Question1   2, 6   |          instance, a man may kill a foe, whom he wishes ~to kill,
 2   2, 6   |             indeed wish to kill his foe, but killed him in ~ignorance,
 3   2, 40  | consequently prove dangerous to the foe.~
 4   2, 42  |         hidden; for instance if the foe hides himself in ambush:
 5   2, 100 |             make a compact with the foe, ~than to be insolent to
 6   2, 2   |         death, and to charge at the foe with ~danger to oneself,
 7   2, 29  |             than a kinsman who is a foe. ~Therefore in doing acts
 8   2, 33  |           vexatious and ~persistent foe to the hermit." Therefore
 9   2, 38  |      suffering at the hands of the ~foe. Now this seems to be above
10   2, 42  |           who fight and conquer the foe, which is the ~commander'
11   2, 62  |             as a soldier slays the ~foe by the authority of his
12   2, 62  |       soldier ~fighting against the foe, and in the minister of
13   2, 69  |       should keep faith even with a foe, as Tully says (De offic.
14   2, 86  |          continency man overcomes a foe within himself, or to the ~
15   2, 115 |        wield his sword ~against the foe, but also to sharpen his
16   2, 185 |          xxviii): "The most cunning foe has scattered on all ~sides
17   3, 41  |            His adversary, since the foe of the ~human race was vanquished,
18   3, 81  |        friend, comes to His table a foe?" But (Judas) did not receive
19   3, 89  |             and bravely attacks the foe, ~than of one who has never
20 Suppl, 93|        never to have yielded to the foe: and the crown is due, not
 
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