Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  22|  speechless, with less wit and sense than any beast, block, stone?
 2  II,  33|        we all are wont, from a sense of what will be to our advantage,
 3  II,  43|        is there a man with any sense of reason who thinks that
 4  II,  68|        done contrary to common sense and the discretion all men
 5  II,  70|         and began to have some sense of their own existence.
 6 III,  19|      is corrupted into a human sense, and does not carry its
 7   V,  12|     lewd members was to give a sense of security to the immortals,
 8   V,  22|      is there, with but little sense even of what becomes a man,
 9   V,  23|         or was affected by any sense of wrong, would it not be
10   V,  34|       doubtful, and attach one sense only to an expression which
11   V,  35|      with a double meaning and sense, and in a way admitting
12   V,  44|    forced into such changes of sense? For what are we to substitute
13  VI,  24|   nature, and that there is no sense in them, but that they formed
14  VI,  26|        void of reason and good sense, that they were kept back
15 VII,   1| sacrifice to those who have no sense, or to think that they should
16 VII,   8|        abandons completely all sense of displeasure? What passes
17 VII,  25|    these gratify them with any sense of pleasure or delight,
18 App     |      that of any man of common sense, even although he has not
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