Book, Paragraph

1   I,  42|       opponent, becoming more mad and more frantic, will perhaps
2   I,  43|       females, the flames and mad desires of illicit love?
3   I,  64| beasts, runaways, exiles, and mad and frantic slaves of the
4  II,   1|       are roused to bursts of mad and savage fury? Did He
5  II,  55|      in a maze of impious and mad conjectures, we must answer
6 III,  36|      no one would doubt that, mad with rage and fury, you
7  IV,  31|   rouse any one's spirit to a mad desire for revenge? If the
8  IV,  34|   making known, as if he were mad and ignorant, the mistresses
9   V,  39|     Attica must be considered mad to have received a religious
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