Book, Chapter
1 I, 1 | what they had once been. Day after day, indeed, you groan
2 I, 1 | had once been. Day after day, indeed, you groan over
3 I, 6 | are unjust, since not a day passes without your modifying
4 I, 7 | practices, and we multiply from day to day; the more we are,
5 I, 7 | we multiply from day to day; the more we are, to the
6 I, 9 | remained to the present day, unless they had been more
7 I, 10 | Gabinius, however, on the first day of the ensuing January,
8 I, 13 | because we make Sunday a day of festivity. What then?
9 I, 13 | and you have selected its day, in preference to the preceding
10 I, 13 | preference to the preceding day as the most suitable in
11 I, 14 | enters the lists for hire day after day with a sound body,
12 I, 14 | lists for hire day after day with a sound body, and so
13 I, 16 | liberty, in the face of day, or in the natural night,
14 I, 18 | suffering which up to his day was without a precedent;
15 I, 18 | you encounter wild beasts day after day in the midst of
16 I, 18 | encounter wild beasts day after day in the midst of peaceful
17 II, 5 | from itself the light of day, ripens the fruit with its
18 II, conc| goddess-like, to fix one day~ The seat of universal sway,~
19 app, frag| Hesperian tongue is to this day called Latin, as likewise
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