Book, Paragraph

1   I,  46| different speech to be using well-known sounds, and the peculiar
2  II,   6| lowest and highest? Have the well-known words never rung in your
3  II,   7|    which in the Phaedrus the well-known Socrates cannot comprehend-what
4  IV,  15|      is told in earnest as a well-known matter, either they are
5   V,   1|     by thirst, came to their well-known haunts. But when they had
6   V,  21|      then we shall quote the well-known senarian verse of a Tarentine
7  VI,  13|   harlot's face? Phryne. the well-known native of Thespia-as those
8  VI,  13|      making of statues. That well-known and most distinguished statuary,
9 VII,   4|     is addressed to the five well-known senses; but if the gods
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