Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   6|      own blood than stain our hands and our conscience with
 2   I,   6|     begun to withhold hostile hands from the blood of a fellow-creature.
 3   I,  41|     was torn in pieces by the hands of a hundred senators, do
 4   I,  45|       Was He one of us, whose hands the waters of the lethargic
 5   I,  45|  maimed stretched forth their hands, and the joints relaxed
 6   I,  63|  wrest the weapons from their hands, and rend from them all
 7   I,  65| nothing to deserve it at your hands; to wish, if it were allowed
 8  II,   8|       your sick bodies to the hands of physicians, without believing
 9  II,   9|   eyes, and handled with your hands, those things which you
10  II,  17|   chosen to give to them also hands to help them, they too would,
11  II,  17| ponder them, although we have hands to serve us dexterously
12  II,  21|     lips in the hollow of his hands. For habit, growing into
13 III,   6|  minds, and stretch forth our hands in prayer, and do not refuse
14 III,   6|  would it require at our weak hands a second pleading, as it
15 III,   9|   would be no use. For as the hands, feet, eyes, and other members
16 III,  13|    adapted to three services; hands to do their work, moving
17 III,  23|   they become worse under the hands of the physician. Mercury
18 III,  27|       own reputation into the hands of worthless harlots; that
19 III,  36|     us, men suffer ill at the hands of the gods; although, indeed,
20  IV,  25|     Venus as wounded by men's hands? Is not Panyassis one of
21  IV,  25|       pain he suffered at the hands of Hipocoon's children?
22  IV,  34|      this honour even at your hands, that you should repel insults
23  IV,  36| resounds with the clapping of hands and applause. And to the
24   V,   2|       substance, or had their hands been formed of hard bones,
25   V,  11|      carefully introduced his hands, handled the members of
26   V,  14|    own sacred, her own divine hands, did she touch and lift
27   V,  16|      and ill-fated youth laid hands upon himself, and which
28  VI,   8|       believed to be in their hands. We have next to say something
29  VI,  10|       in mundane ways in your hands they take the forms of men
30  VI,  14| product of the labour of your hands, -to cast yourself down
31  VI,  16|   rest of the head, imperfect hands without arms, bellies and
32 VII,  10|       fate, snatch out of our hands that opinion, and assert
33 VII,  11|      without the use of their hands, that they are swallowed
34 VII,  33|   vows, do they lift up their hands to heaven in their admiration,
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