Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3| transgressions. If it were not a mark of stupidity to linger on
 2   I,  31|    things palpably foolish, is a mark of greater folly.
 3   I,  40|         nor is he stained by the mark of any baseness, who suffers
 4   I,  49|         fortune. For this is the mark of a true god and of kingly
 5   I,  58|        truth, but do not clearly mark its great features. But
 6  II,  30|         is no place on which the mark of this very corruption
 7  IV,  16|      named Coryphasia, either to mark her mother, or because she
 8  IV,  32|      more insulting to brand and mark any one with false accusations,
 9   V,  16|          of violets? Do they not mark this, how the Mother adorned
10 VII,  35|          of them are wide of the mark, as form belongs to a mortal
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