Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   7|    arise those evils by which wretched mortals are now oppressed
 2   I,  49|   shrines are full of all the wretched and the unfortunate? Unless,
 3  II,   4|    but delivered ignorant and wretched then from those who most
 4  II,   7|     age? Now the weakness and wretched ignorance of these theories
 5  II,  38|     without the addition of a wretched and useless being's exertion?
 6  II,  40|  wrung from the life-blood of wretched men; should be ever extending
 7  II,  41|     tear asunder the flesh of wretched animals, some snatch one
 8  II,  45|    all the diseases which the wretched and pitiable human race
 9  II,  46|    man, a being miserable and wretched, who is sorry that he exists,
10  II,  46|    that there might always be wretched ones by whose agonies some
11   V,  22| passionate lusts; so that the wretched being seems to have been
12  VI,  18|   remaining, what can be more wretched than they, what more unfortunate
13  VI,  22|       the furious joys of the wretched men, and to bring back their
14 VII,  11|      the world so many and so wretched men, whence come so many
15 VII,  12|     that they suffer the most wretched to undergo whatever perils
16 VII,  20|     victims? Do you leave the wretched creatures, despoiled it
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