Book, Paragraph

 1  II,   1|      bitter hostility? or what offences you remember which He did,
 2  IV,  32|       remiss in punishing such offences, or have not, by passing
 3  IV,  32| forward and upbraid their real offences. For to be called what you
 4 VII,   6|    deities is disturbed by the offences of little men, and wounded
 5 VII,   8|     favour of those who pardon offences may be bought.
 6 VII,   9|       be slain for another, or offences against themselves to be
 7 VII,  33|       have any recollection of offences committed by men, they lay
 8 VII,  40| secrets were revealed, and the offences made known were punished.
 9 VII,  42|       the penalty of another's offences, and should be forced to
10 VII,  43|       should pay for another's offences by being robbed of their
11 VII,  43|        and to avenge one man's offences upon others? But, I am told,
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