Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  18|   agitation, there of necessity passion must exist. Where passion
 2   I,  18|       passion must exist. Where passion is situated, it is reasonable
 3   I,  25|       that they put forth their passion upon us, that they thirst
 4   I,  65|     said more than once; what a passion, so murderous? to declare
 5  II,  12|        has subdued the fires of passion, and caused races, and peoples,
 6  II,  13|       refrain from all vice and passion; about this you are anxious,
 7  II,  15|         in nothing depraved; no passion overpowers, no lust degrades
 8 III,  16|   inflame us, what a tempest of passion would they excite, if they
 9 III,  28|     removed from any feeling of passion? that they are gentle, lovers
10 III,  40|         ruled within in reason, passion, and thought. As you see,
11  IV,  22|         to have glowed with the passion of a heart roused to lust
12  IV,  26|         in the heat of maddened passion to have robbed of their
13  IV,  28|     where there is every mental passion arising from disgusting
14   V,   7|         now filled with furious passion, raving frantically and
15   V,   9|       to gratify his detestable passion upon his mother? and could
16   V,  20| thereafter from her ever-raging passion: nor has she any other wish
17   V,  29|      brothers, already hot with passion, and sisters sprung from
18   V,  29|       been able to restrain its passion within right limits, why
19  VI,   2|        those who are touched by passion live a life of suffering,
20 VII,   5|     angry; nay, rather, that no passion is further from them than
21 VII,   8|        to give up their fits of passion and desist from their wailings,
22 VII,  43|      had been the cause of such passion by his disobedient delay,
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