Book,  Par.

 1   III,     16|    of revolution he had so corrupted the common soldiers by licence
 2   III,     49|   Husbands have often been corrupted by the vices of their wives.
 3   III,     59|   of the Roman traders. He corrupted a few of the men, but the
 4   III,     91|   evil words and deeds. So corrupted indeed and debased was that
 5    IV,      9| now that his wife had been corrupted, were betrayed.~ ~
 6    IV,     88|  he reproached with having corrupted some of his freedmen and
 7    XI,     19|  he might well be dreaded, corrupted as he would be by the bread
 8    XI,     48| But in that heart, utterly corrupted by profligacy, nothing noble
 9   XIV,     21| licentiousness to our long corrupted morals. Even, with virtuous
10   XIV,     83|  that the prefect had been corrupted into a design of gaining
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