Chapter
1 II | not look with contempt on pleasure, regarding it as a precious
2 XII | good to throw the veil of pleasure over their iniquity. Those,
3 XII | wild beasts could not find pleasure exquisite enough, save in
4 XIV | there is also a lust of pleasure. But the show is just a
5 XIV | the show is just a sort of pleasure. I think, then, that under
6 XV | agitation, since where there is pleasure, there is keenness of feeling
7 XV | keenness of feeling giving pleasure its zest; and where there
8 XV | is no desire, there is no pleasure, and he is chargeable with
9 XVIII | leapings; you will never find pleasure in injurious or useless
10 XIX | the innocent can find no pleasure in another's sufferings:
11 XIX | the victims of the public pleasure. Even in the case of those
12 XX | because they decline to lose a pleasure, hold out that we cannot
13 XXII | What perversity! They have pleasure in those whom yet they punish;
14 XXIII | spite of the sweetness of pleasure, lead him to think that
15 XXIII | arts! Will God have any pleasure in the charioteer who disquiets
16 XXVIII| Christian, if thou wouldst have pleasure in this life as well as
17 XXVIII| instance, give the name of pleasure to quietness and repose;
18 XXVIII| Can we not live without pleasure, who cannot but with pleasure
19 XXVIII| pleasure, who cannot but with pleasure die? For what is our wish
20 XXIX | past life? What greater pleasure than distaste of pleasure
21 XXIX | pleasure than distaste of pleasure itself, contempt of all
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