Caput
1 II | wished an audience! But can anyone have the hardihood
2 IV | words: "But these matters can be shown better by deeds
3 V | over all others. For what can possibly be above him who
4 VI | space you have, which reason can prolong, although it naturally
5 VII | agrees that no one pursuit can be successfully followed
6 VII | stretches farther than he can be heard, yet he says: "
7 VII | pleasure is there that any hour can now bring? They are all
8 VII | does not desire and yet can hold. And so there is no
9 IX | IX. Can anything be sillier than
10 X | attacks of disease; this can neither be troubled nor
11 X | before it has come, and can no more brook delay than
12 XII | privacies of life that they can neither eat nor drink without
13 XII | people—provided that you can call it pampering to unlearn
14 XII | direction, that by now we can charge the mimes with neglect.
15 XII | someone to tell him—how can he be the master of any
16 XIV | empty hands; all mortals can meet with them by night
17 XV | draw the utmost that you can desire. What happiness,
18 XVI | example to our own weakness? Can the nights which they pay
19 XVIII| with the worst evil that can befall men even during a
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