Book,  Par.

 1     I,     95|        people, or, in short, any corrupt act by which a man had impaired "
 2    II,     71|      soldiers were inclined to a corrupt compliance, as a whispered
 3   III,     39|        the commonwealth was most corrupt. ~ ~
 4    IV,     23|         and excess of which in a corrupt age are alike dangerous.
 5    VI,     21|         the early days of a less corrupt morality. First, the Twelve
 6    VI,     39|          house whose morals were corrupt, still lived with a certain
 7   XII,     16| positions and sent emissaries to corrupt the enemy and bribe them
 8  XIII,     35|        commissioners; then, when corrupt practices were suspected
 9  XIII,     40|          powerfully supported by corrupt influence that some of his
10  XIII,     67|       the life of those by whose corrupt influence he had escaped. ~ ~
11    XV,     25|         in the Cincian bill; the corrupt practices of candidates,
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