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 1     Pre     |      writing 2 trifling in its nature, and not sufficiently adapted
 2 Miltiad     |     easily understood that the nature of all states is the same;
 3   Alcib     |       native of Athens. In him nature seems to have tried what
 4   Alcib     |         and so contradictory a nature, in the same man. ~II. He
 5   Alcib     |    than those which fortune or nature had bestowed upon him. At
 6   Alcib     |    tell of a higher and better nature. ~III. In the Peloponnesian
 7   Alcib(65) |       to something of a public nature.----Bos. ~
 8    Dion     |     many other advantages from nature; among them, a disposition
 9   Datam     | together, a position of such a nature, that he could neither be
10   Datam     |      rested on himself and the nature of his ground, for he had
11  Agesil     |       this great man had found nature favourable in giving him
12   Kings(225)|           Paid (their) debt to nature by disease." ~
13   Attic     |      if a constant goodness of nature, which is neither increased
14   Attic     |       Nor did he act thus from nature alone, though we all obey
15   Attic     |       to accelerate that which nature herself would bring, and,
16    Frag     |   Likewise.~Opulent and divine nature, to obtain greater admiration
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