Book, Chapter
1 I, 1 | what they had hated, and take to hating what they had
2 I, 1 | aware how the mind is apt to take to evil courses. How many
3 I, 1 | the guilty themselves, who take the wrong side, and turn
4 I, 2 | and a defence); but, to take an instance in the trial
5 I, 6 | sought by regular process? Take, for instance, the case
6 I, 7 | No one, then, says, to take an instance, "The report
7 I, 7 | proceedings in which they take no part. The first step
8 I, 7 | to themselves, then, and take them for granted; and so
9 I, 7 | Even more voracious bites take nothing away from the credit
10 I, 8 | regularly after the Phrygians? Take care, however, lest those
11 I, 10| severity and stern discipline. Take, for example, Socrates.
12 I, 10| with what pleasure do you take up the literature of the
13 I, 12| By way of example, let us take the case of a tree which
14 I, 12| if you transplant it, or take a cutting off its branches
15 I, 18| irksome to enumerate. (If we take the torture) of the cross,
16 I, 19| strong convictions; for we take for granted a resurrection
17 I, 19| greater boldness, you must take your sponge, or perhaps
18 II, 9 | along with her, disdained to take her beautiful self and father'
19 II, 12| better himself (should take them) than the wolves, (
20 II, 13| their death. Here, then, I take my stand. If your gods were
21 II, 14| last class also. I will take Hercules himself for raising
22 II, 15| It would be tedious to take a survey of all those, too,
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