Book, Paragraph

 1  IV,  31|      games and sacred races the dancer has halted, or the musician
 2 VII,   9|      care? did I drag forward a dancer so that thy deity was offended?
 3 VII,  39|     consuls, point out that the dancer had displeased him, that
 4 VII,  39| announce his disapproval of the dancer,-overcome by fear of dying,
 5 VII,  41|    himself was the cause of the dancer's vitiating the games, for
 6 VII,  41|     wronged in the case of that dancer because he was led through
 7 VII,  43|         games occasioned by the dancer, and the cause of the sadness
 8 VII,  43|      perhaps not knowing what a dancer is? And if he indeed knew,
 9 App     |    little; who declare that the dancer has displeased them if some
10 App     |      legs; who declare that the dancer has displeased them if some
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