Book, Paragraph

 1  II,   2|      wicked deeds, and raise our face to heaven as though He saw
 2  II,   7|        of body, and this cast of face, from the hand of some maker
 3  II,  41|         defiled their mouths and face? Was it for this He sent
 4 III,   4|         at no time have seen the face and countenance of each;
 5 III,  16|          be set up with an ass's face, the revered Pompilius with
 6  IV,   5|      left hand; and if I turn my face thither, the west will be
 7  IV,  12|           Did you ever see their face their deportment, their
 8  VI,  10|         does not derive from the face of the original features
 9  VI,  10|          there is the very stern face of a lion smeared with pure
10  VI,  10|       himself is a mere mask and face, without the rest of the
11  VI,  12|       peculiar appearance of the face, usually points out the
12  VI,  13|      utmost skill, fashioned the face of the Cnidian Venus on
13  VI,  13|     beauty taken from a harlot's face? Phryne. the well-known
14  VI,  14|          yourself down upon your face, beg aid suppliantly, and,
15  VI,  16|       not see sometimes over the face of an image cobwebs and
16  VI,  21|         affront of stripping his face of its beard and disfiguring
17  VI,  22|          with it in embraces and face to face, and to do other
18  VI,  22|          in embraces and face to face, and to do other vain things,
19  VI,  25| inclinations? Janus, with double face, or that spiked key by which
20  VI,  25|           Anubis, with his dog's face; or Priapus, of less importance
21 VII,  15|         a ram, a bull before the face of a god, and slay them
22 VII,  49|          that image instead of a face, rough and unhewn, giving
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