Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2| temperature by which he is wont to act upon the earth? Has the
 2   I,  37|           born like ourselves, you act with great injustice, in
 3   I,  46|           of us, I say, who by one act of intervention at once
 4   I,  48|            men should endure. What act like these have all these
 5  II,  16|           living creatures, and to act as such.
 6  II,  42|          steal and drive away, not act uprightly, and betray their
 7  II,  53|           you? In so believing, we act most absurdly, sillily.
 8  II,  54|            For what more monstrous act of folly can be found than
 9  IV,  10|         say that these parts, too, act under the care of their
10   V,  17|        their arms and breasts, and act as those dolefully circumstanced?
11   V,  29|        holds good against the very act of worship? What say you,
12  VI,   2|         race and human weakness to act otherwise; and the maxims
13  VI,  24|            their manners, learn to act as men; and that august
14 VII,   8| displeasure? What passes from this act to modify his resentment?
15 VII,  23|       because the good gods cannot act badly, even if they have
16 VII,  33|     displeasure if she sees mimics act the part of Adonis also
17 VII,  33|         gods themselves also play, act lasciviously, dance, compose
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