Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|   most ancient, at any period wholly free from such an inevitable
 2  II,   6|  understanding, see something wholly different and profound?
 3  II,  28|      within itself also to be wholly forgotten; for one cause
 4  II,  48|      complete and entire, and wholly perfect in its integrity.
 5  II,  57|       others. It is therefore wholly vain, a useless task, to
 6  II,  66|  foreign rites, this is urged wholly without reason. For what
 7 III,   5|     of whose existence we are wholly ignorant.
 8 III,  30|   belief, will be found to be wholly useless.
 9 III,  37| agreement marks those who are wholly ignorant of the truth, and
10 III,  42|        if what he is shall be wholly unknown? or how can it avail
11  IV,   8|       to each, since you were wholly ignorant of their existence;
12  IV,  33|   that which should have been wholly put away from human society,
13   V,  15|   this story is false, and is wholly untrue. It is no mat ter
14  VI,  19|     gods dwell in images-each wholly in one, or divided into
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