Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|             their inhabitants. Every kind of crop is consumed, and
 2   I,   8|          opinion on subjects of this kind, that I may not appear when
 3   I,  18|              that an impulse of this kind agitates the divinities
 4   I,  19|     worshippers of Christ with every kind of loss?
 5   I,  28|             an existence each of its kind. But if this is unchallenged
 6   I,  32|        discover by reasoning of this kind that He exists. It is a
 7   I,  34|         there is a deity of a higher kind, since Jupiter is by us
 8   I,  36|              the gods? Is not this a kind of malice and of greed?
 9   I,  37|           adverse or of a favourable kind in discharging their functions.
10   I,  38|          fashioned him, or from what kind of material did He compact
11   I,  40|       argument? For neither does the kind and disgrace of the death
12   I,  40|           tortured in the most cruel kind of death? No innocent person
13   I,  43|           profess to do, nor in what kind of acts all their learning
14   I,  50|       unskilled persons of a similar kind, that they being sent through
15   I,  51|            human being power of this kind? Did he endow with this
16   I,  54|           belief to events of such a kind. But shall we say that the
17   I,  55|      hitherto seen nothing of such a kind as could by its wonderful
18   I,  64|             in you lies, gift with a kind of immortality, as it were,
19   I,  64|         reproaches. Nay, if yon were kind and gentle in spirit, you
20   I,  65|            from you altogether every kind of disease and sickness,
21   I,  65|             Would you not with every kind of flattery and honour receive
22   I,  65|         Would you not wish that that kind of medicine should be quite
23  II,   8|        drought, is there in life any kind of business demanding diligence
24  II,   9|            does he not defend with a kind of assent, as it were, like
25  II,  10|             thousands of books; what kind of judgment, pray, is this,
26  II,  17|              us dexterously in every kind of work.
27  II,  23|             by all these, or of what kind each should be to be fit
28  II,  32|            the knowledge of Him is a kind of vital leaven and cement
29  II,  40|              purposes of a different kind; should force their way
30  II,  41|          knees, and with every other kind of wantonness, both to lay
31  II,  43|             and home, in which every kind of wickedness should be
32  II,  50|            is, if the nature of each kind would abide in its own integrity,
33  II,  51|           they have sprung. But what kind of crime is it either to
34  II,  58|            founded and made, by what kind of work, pray, or for what
35  II,  59|          should be only one, and one kind of climate, so that there
36  II,  59|            bitter or cold? From what kind of material have the inner
37  II,  63|      condition of mortality. Of what kind, my opponents ask, what,
38 III,   3|           order, form, as it were, a kind of plebeian mass. But do
39 III,  16|            do us honour also by some kind of worship, and to show
40 III,  22|         intelligently expert in some kind of work, must himself first
41 III,  32|            named as though he were a kind of go-between; and because
42 III,  41|             are ghosts, as it were a kind of tutelary demon, spirits
43 III,  42|         endless task to examine each kind separately, and make it
44  IV,   6|          name because men build that kind of fireplace of unbaked
45   V,   2|            fall-how training in some kind of knowledge should avert
46   V,   8|             suffer it, that from one kind of stones, and from the
47   V,  22|             of you, that there is no kind of disgrace, no infamous
48   V,  22| everywhere-Jupiter. Nor is there any kind of baseness in which you
49   V,  22|         occasion of evil-speaking, a kind of open place into which
50   V,  23|            still hot with rage, as a kind of fillet to draw forth
51   V,  29|             slaughter, and any other kind of punishments, and by fear
52   V,  31|          your abuse? or is there any kind of insult so damnable in
53   V,  43|             honourable, and by every kind of subtlety you pervert
54  VI,   3|            more truly, the narrowest kind of caverns formed and contrived
55  VI,  15|            things are changed by the kind of form into which they
56  VI,  24|              states, in order that a kind of appearance, as it were,
57 VII,   1|        powers require nothing of the kind, and are not possessed by
58 VII,   2|             can that which is one in kind be less or more in its parts
59 VII,   3|           they are maintained by any kind of nourishment, and that
60 VII,   4|           pleasure is, as it were, a kind of flattery of the body,
61 VII,   4|       believe that the gods, who are kind, beneficent, gentle, are
62 VII,   5|          whatever is harassed by any kind of disturbance, is, it is
63 VII,   9|             which I give forth is my kind of words, and is understood
64 VII,  13|             a greater being, is of a kind having reference to the
65 VII,  15|         nature of what is said, what kind of honour is this, to bind
66 VII,  15|              them in his sight? What kind of honour is it to invite
67 VII,  15|             share in with dogs? What kind of honour is it, having
68 VII,  16|          more artistic in the former kind of sacrifices, or less ingenious
69 VII,  18|             should be of one nature, kind, and character, all are
70 VII,  21|      consecrate victims of a certain kind to certain deities, and
71 VII,  21|      consecrate victims of a certain kind to certain deities, and
72 VII,  23|             and by inborn laws and a kind of necessity are led to
73 VII,  24|            pottage, but differing in kind and quality; while the series
74 VII,  27|          sacred altars, or from what kind of gum the clouds of fumigation
75 VII,  31|             not be consecrated. What kind of honour, then, is this,
76 VII,  36|             a thousand degrees every kind of excellence in the height
77 VII,  50|              favour. Be it so; but a kind helper never requires to
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