Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  31|       or on the imaginings of empty rumour. For of those who
 2   I,  47|      might boast Himself into empty ostentation, bat that hardened
 3   I,  65|    them as but a soothsayer's empty tales. Does He speak very
 4  II,  21|       there is nothing but an empty void, -one of the race of
 5  II,  29|   uplifted and puffed up with empty vanity; you not only hold
 6  II,  62|    certain deities. These are empty delusions, and excite vain
 7  II,  65|     reject and shun, but term empty words, and assail with jocose
 8 III,  34|     so, again is Ceres but an empty name, and Diana: and thus
 9  IV,   1|      if, while you think them empty names without any substance,
10  IV,   3|       or, merely playing with empty fictions, abandon yourselves
11   V,  43|      conjectures, and rave in empty fictions. Let it be granted
12  VI,  18|     free to leave the statues empty, the images will then at
13  VI,  23|      But now because they are empty, and protected by no indwellers,
14 VII,  19|       are an utterly vain and empty name, and that underneath
15 VII,  33|      and shouting out noisily empty vows, do they lift up their
16 VII,  39| because he supposed it was an empty dream, and would find no
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