Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|    ancient, at any period wholly free from such an inevitable
 2   I,   3|       were the ancients, indeed, free from these ills, when we
 3   I,  25|          we assign to them minds free from resentment, and far
 4   I,  27|       desire for purity, and may free ourselves from every stain
 5   I,  46|        as you allege, but by the free exercise of a greater power?
 6   I,  65|     limits of life you should be free from such countless bodily
 7  II,  25|       unloaded; a dove, when set free, to fly back to its master'
 8  II,  40|       human bodies; and when set free, to be parted from their
 9  II,  45|          as enemies, enslave the free, do violence to maidens
10  II,  62| everlasting by His good-will and free gift, how can it be that
11  II,  63|          what, when? If you were free from presumption, arrogance,
12  II,  64|        with uniform benevolence, free all without exception? I
13  II,  64|  exception? I reply, does not He free all alike who invites all
14  II,  64|      bounty depend upon your own free choice? God, Plato says,
15  II,  76|        robbed of their rights of free birth? But, my opponent
16  II,  77|    shadows and forms, so far you free us from pressing and heavy
17 III,  10|          O divinity, pure, holy, free from and unstained by any
18 III,  14|          then, the divine bodies free from these deformities?
19 III,  24|        the gods was of their own free will, and that the unlooked-for
20 III,  26|     cities in the dust, robs the free of their liberty, and makes
21  IV,  32|          not, however, even thus free from the guilt of dishonouring
22  IV,  37|          with us, * and they are free from its presence, and the
23   V,   7|    safety only so long as he was free from the ties of marriage,
24   V,  14|         rest of his mortal body, free from the law of corruption,
25   V,  28|          fulfil his promise, and free himself from the obligation
26  VI,   2|          made perfect; should be free from all agitating and disturbing
27  VI,  12|         with a woman's perfectly free and easily flowing lines
28  VI,  12|          but with his right hand free, and with his dress girt
29  VI,  13|         all, that it was his own free gift, that Jupiter had been
30  VI,  18|         affairs? or do they have free passage, when they please
31  VI,  18|         forth, and are perfectly free to leave the statues empty,
32 VII,   4|          sorrow; nor can that be free from the anxiety of grief,
33 VII,   4|           But the gods should be free from both passions, if we
34 VII,  11|     condition? Why are not those free from calamity who every
35 VII,  34|         runs, sits, walks, or is free from such motions and inactivity.
36 VII,  41|         was right? But if he was free from guilt, and not worthy
37 VII,  47|      should be always maintained free from pestilential blasts,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License