Book, Paragraph

1 III,   9|   had wished in them to make sport of its own improvidence,
2  IV,  13| pretend to be gods, and make sport of men's ignorance. Even
3  IV,  15|       without being made the sport of equivocal illusions.
4  IV,  35|    turn them shamefully into sport? What do your pantomimists,
5   V,   1|     forth by poets merely in sport, what of those found in
6   V,   6|      thirst roused in him by sport and hunting. Hither runs
7 VII,  33|   are done, and idle fellows sport before the eyes of the multitude?
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