Book,  Par.

1     I,     60|          Senate and criticise its members' words? He had taken good
2   III,     75| self-control; because we were all members of one city. Nor even afterwards
3    IV,     82|     Senate from its distinguished members, and was applauded by the
4    VI,      8|           Caecilianus, one of its members, the chief witness against
5    VI,      9|          of the age, that leading members of the Senate, some openly,
6    VI,     39|       good citizens, and even the members of that house whose morals
7    XI,     29|           into the past, that new members have been brought into the
8  XIII,      9|          in the speeches of those members who proposed a public thanksgiving,
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