Book, Paragraph

1   I,  38|     restrained wild beasts and robbers, and water-serpents of many
2   I,  62|      down and slain by impious robbers, would Apollo be said to
3   I,  63|       savage and most hardened robbers; nor did He think it worth
4  VI,  20|       subject the sacrilegious robbers to fitting punishments at
5  VI,  23|        when by pirates and sea robbers he was both plundered and
6  VI,  24|       by tyrants, by kings, by robbers, and by nocturnal thieves,
7  VI,  24| carried away into the caves of robbers, in spite even of the terrible
8 VII,  43|         without any reason, as robbers do? For if the old rustic,
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