Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  17|          do you not see what base feelings, what unseemly frenzies,
 2  II,   5|         and at random? that these feelings are adopted on being met
 3  II,  39|  numberless arts suggested by bad feelings, and to be fashioned with
 4  IV,  19|           that which offends your feelings manifests wantonness and
 5  IV,  20|       which men of at all refined feelings regard as at once execrable
 6  IV,  37|       furious, and are excited by feelings of rage as your imaginings
 7  IV,  37|       never cease to jar upon the feelings of the gods, and excite
 8  VI,   1|      anger, if they are roused by feelings of rage.
 9  VI,   2|         given over to disquieting feelings, have been bound by the
10  VI,   4|       expressions of our reverent feelings. For if they are invoked
11 VII,   5|          mind, that all agitating feelings are unknown to the gods,
12 VII,   5|        suffer it with tempestuous feelings, and brings them into danger
13 VII,   8|          and lays aside his angry feelings and frenzy; that if I consume
14 VII,  17|       having acquired some of the feelings of men, were to think and
15 VII,  36| reconciled to men, their offended feelings being soothed by the blood
16 VII,  36|          and that their resentful feelings conceived before are mollified
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