Book,  Par.

 1     I,     52|      madmen who outraged every human right? Let these, at least,
 2     I,     81|      limbs of horses, and also human heads, prominently nailed
 3     I,     95|       said repeatedly that all human things were uncertain, and
 4     I,    100|      the divine as well as the human. However, the devising of
 5     I,    104|     had admirably provided for human interests in having assigned
 6    II,     17|        forget alike divine and human laws. If in your weariness
 7    II,     29|       finding there no form of human life, perished of hunger,
 8    II,     79|       gives out the sound of a human voice; the pyramids, rising
 9    II,     89|   walls disinterred remains of human bodies, incantations and
10   III,     26|  impressed by their mockery of human plans in every transaction.
11   III,     98|     was in the science of law, human and divine, he had now dishonoured
12    IV,     53|        which can discern alike human and divine claims; to the
13    IV,     67|       of fodder; near them lay human bodies which had perished
14    IV,     86|        natural softness of the human heart under calamity, burst
15    VI,     17|        as far as they could by human means, what were genuine.
16    VI,     25|      extinguished the sense of human fellowship, and, with the
17    VI,     29|     governs the revolutions of human affairs. Indeed, among the
18    VI,     36|  master of law both divine and human, whose position was secure
19    XI,     17|        the most ancient of all human history, are still seen
20    XI,     25|     female figure of more than human stature, and heard a voice, "
21    XI,     49|     sadness, in a word, of any human emotion, either when he
22  XIII,     21|                  Of all things human the most precarious and
23  XIII,     47| breastplates and helmets." Any human being, to say nothing of
24  XIII,     52|      and yet not interfer with human affairs. ~ ~
25  XIII,     65|      most splendid boon on the human race. But this sudden impulse
26   XIV,     37|      out of any other class of human beings, and became a mere
27   XIV,     41|  consult their deities through human entrails. ~ ~
28   XIV,     43|    been left the likenesses of human forms, marvels interpreted
29   XIV,     69|         which, like all things human, sinks powerless beneath
30    XV,     54|        were the precautions of human wisdom. The next thing was
31    XV,     54|      by married women. But all human efforts, all the lavish
32    XV,     58| propitiation with noble blood. Human and other births with two
33   XVI,     14|   sweeping away all classes of human beings without any such
34   XVI,     28|  divine inspiration, more than human. It was possible that the
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