Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|          unfolding the history of past ages, that those ills which
 2   I,  38|           former sensations or of past memories; who has restrained
 3   I,  43|          who have ever existed in past ages, that did anything
 4   I,  48|          we now know, and have in past times known, of other gods
 5  II,  26|          hither knowing all about past times, I would have it teach,
 6  II,  26|     retain their knowledge of the past, however thoroughly they
 7  II,  28|        has no recollection of the past; while, after being actually
 8  II,  67|         away from the religion of past ages, it is fitting that
 9  II,  67|         that you are condemned by past ages as well as we. Do you
10  II,  74|       should know them, while the past ages of those who went before
11   V,  39|        mysteries are traceable to past events, by no change can
12 VII,  10|         settled and fixed in time past, and has causes which cannot
13 VII,  10| unalterable necessity between the past and the future. If it has
14 VII,  12|       prolix discussion, we hurry past unexplained and untouched,
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