Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  21|    in ours the honey become bitter, the flowing oil grow rancid,
 2   I,  42|   unbelievers with the most bitter pains-He was sent to us
 3   I,  64|   hate and condemn Him with bitter reproaches. Nay, if yon
 4  II,   1|   you pursue Christ with so bitter hostility? or what offences
 5  II,  49|     limbs, and shrieking in bitter agony, was quite well, because
 6  II,  49| into it a few drops of less bitter water, for that small quantity
 7  II,  59|      some are sweet, others bitter or cold? From what kind
 8  II,  59|     Are the elements, then, bitter or sweet? have they any
 9 III,  16|     chagrin, and devised by bitter hatred? How much better
10  VI,  21|     buffoon to soberness by bitter torments? For why should
11 VII,  28|  the same things are either bitter or sweet to different species,
12 VII,  28|    and wholesome, sweet and bitter; but just as each one has
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