Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   1|        race has been visited with ills of many kinds, that even
 2   I,   3|          of past ages, that those ills which you speak of were
 3   I,   3|      rendered plain? For if these ills are entirely new, and if
 4   I,   3|         very words by which these ills are characterized bear evidence
 5   I,   3|           indeed, free from these ills, when we have known of mighty
 6   I,  49|          against violence and the ills of fortune. For this is
 7   I,  63|          with troubles and bodily ills, bring them back and restore
 8  II,   7|          undergoes such countless ills? whether the earth gave
 9  II,  58|       cause fashioned man, whence ills have broken forth, or why
10  II,  61|         who devised the causes of ills; whether the sun is larger
11 III,  25|     savage, ever rejoicing in the ills and destruction of mankind.
12 III,  28| themselves the authors of all the ills by which we are daily harassed?
13  IV,  36|       dare to wonder whence these ills come with which the human
14   V,  25|   hospitably Ceres, worn out with ills of many kinds, hangs about
15  VI,   2|           a cruel pleasure in the ills of men; should not terrify
16 VII,  36|           inflict and bring these ills on miserable mortals, we
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