Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  43|   wasting disease on whom they choose; or to sever the affections
 2   I,  61|       in this way, and did not choose to do it in that, are unknown,
 3  II,   5|      they trusted? that slaves choose to be tortured by their
 4  II,  22| spending as many, years as you choose, twenty or thirty,-nay,
 5  II,  28|    years before, eighty if you choose to say so, or even more,
 6  II,  54|        them. But, again, if we choose to say that there are no
 7  II,  64|      does not cause any one to choose his lot in life; nor can
 8  II,  64|       very far from it? Do you choose to take what is offered,
 9   V,  36|        that has been said, you choose out some things which suit
10  VI,  18|        the contrary, when they choose, they fly forth, and are
11 VII,  10|     they will be able, if they choose, to depreciate somewhat
12 VII,  18|  overtax his weak stomach, and choose tender sucklings that he
13 VII,  24|        same way. For we do not choose to mention the caro strebula
14 VII,  24|      In like manner, we do not choose to mention the fendicoe,
15 VII,  31|        worshipped as much as I choose; receive as much dignity
16 VII,  43|      there been that he should choose, to announce his wishes
17 VII,  45|        Aesculapius, unless you choose to bring forward this pretext,
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