Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  16|       through the ill luck of a bad omen?
 2   I,  21|         give good health, to us bad, ay, the very worst. Let
 3   I,  49|       assisted the good and the bad alike; nor was there any
 4  II,  16|      working of which we become bad, ay, most wicked; burn with
 5  II,  29|     which ever shuns what is of bad repute and shameful, who,
 6  II,  39|    numberless arts suggested by bad feelings, and to be fashioned
 7  II,  43|         of baseness, crime, and bad feeling? and were they ordered
 8  II,  55|       afterwards to become very bad and hurtful, -is for them
 9  II,  66|        to prefer good things to bad, useful to useless things,
10 III,  24|         alike,-the good and the bad, the unjust and the just,
11   V,   8|        to a man brought up with bad habits and a pretty rough
12  VI,  11|        your rage you maintain a bad cause, and that although
13 VII,   4|      whom unhappy necessity and bad habit have trained to take
14 VII,  23|    others, on the contrary, are bad, and rather inclined to
15 VII,  23| devising of mischief; while the bad knows not to restrain his
16 VII,  23|    receive no gifts, and become bad instead of good; while,
17 VII,  23|     while, on the contrary, the bad, if they receive offerings,
18 VII,  44|        from a woman's womb, who bad by yearly stages reached
19 VII,  48|      man-nets, and the good and bad have been able to exist
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