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1 I, 5, 4 | irrational animals, and of wild beasts, and men. And on
2 I, 6, 3 | gladiators either fight with wild beasts, or singly encounter
3 I, 18, 1 | reptiles, birds, quadrupeds, wild beasts, and after all these,
4 I, 31, 4 | may not only expose the wild beast to view, but may inflict
5 IV, 20, 12| by anticipation that the wild olive tree is grafted into
6 IV, 27, 2 | thee, who, when thou wert a wild olive tree, wert grafted
7 V, 8, 4 | as beasts of burden and wild beasts; custom likewise
8 V, 10 | COMPARISON DRAWN FROM THE WILD OLIVE-TREE, WHOSE QUALITY
9 V, 10, 1 | flesh. "But thou, being a wild olive-tree," he says, "hast
10 V, 10, 1 | As, therefore, when the wild olive has been engrafted,
11 V, 10, 1 | former condition, viz., a wild olive, it is "cut off, and
12 V, 10, 1 | one were to say that the wild olive is not received into
13 V, 10, 1 | flesh and blood and the wild olive. For as the good olive,
14 V, 10, 1 | certain time, if left to grow wild and to run to i wood, does
15 V, 10, 1 | wood, does itself become a wild olive; or again, if the
16 V, 10, 1 | olive; or again, if the wild olive be carefully tended
17 V, 10, 2 | But as the engrafted wild olive does not certainly
18 V, 10, 2 | another name, being now not a wild olive, but a fruit-bearing
19 V, 10, 2 | such. Then, again, as the wild olive, if it be not grafted
20 V, 28, 4 | he was condemned to the wild beasts because of his testimony
21 V, 28, 4 | ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be found
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