Book, Chapter
1 I, 2 | every means should be at hand for arriving at a true verdict.
2 I, 4 | frivolous works of the human hand; the temperance, by which
3 I, 7 | observe it; on the other hand, it threatens with the eternal
4 I, 10 | with an arrow from a human hand; he keeps Mars a prisoner
5 I, 10 | brother, drags away, hammer in hand, the remains of the gladiators;
6 I, 10 | despising them on the one hand, you flatter them on the
7 I, 16 | misfortunes: they, on the one hand, how they had lost their
8 I, 16 | a boy; he, on the other hand, that he had been lost from
9 I, 18 | to the trainers sword in hand and offer yourselves as
10 II, 1 | have our objection ready to hand in the declaration that,
11 II, 7 | characters? And, on the other hand, do you not deprive the
12 II, 8 | and put it under his right hand, because the care of the
13 II, 8 | concentrated s under his hand. And they put at his side
14 II, 10 | he began to play with one hand for Hercules and the other
15 II, 10 | winner, I mean his other hand, then he should provide
16 II, 10 | the same for Hercules. The hand of Hercules won. That achievement
17 II, 12 | proofs? Neither, on the one hand, do you mean Saturn to be
18 II, 12 | being; nor, on the other hand, whilst portraying him as
19 II, 14 | too, they had not ready to hand their own Theseus to worship,
20 II, conc| rescue Delphi out of the hand of Pyrrhus? They who lost
21 app, frag| to be sure, with his own hand! but he sewed thereon three
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