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Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Ana | refute and retort every charge you bring against us; but
2 Ana | rumour is responsible for the charge (ch. 7). Whereas natural
3 Ana | of Christ (ch. 23). ~Your charge of sacrilege thus falls
4 Ana | worthlessness to trade,—a charge which is sufficiently refuted
5 II | not an enquiry into the charge. Whereas when you judicially
6 II | extorted (whichever the charge may be that is falsely cast
7 IV | refute and retort every charge you bring against us; but
8 IV | refute what is laid to our charge, but also retort the charges
9 IV | We shall reply to each charge, both those which we are
10 VI | from the senate on a grave charge of ostentation a patrician
11 VII | rumour is responsible for the charge. ~WE are called the most
12 VII | most infamous of men on the charge of an infanticidal religious
13 VII | present time to prove the charge it in times past cast in
14 XXIV | CHAPTER XXIV. ~Your charge of Sacrilege thus falls
15 XXIV | sufficient to repel the charge brought against us of injury
16 XXIV | accord with the criminal charge of irreligion, since you
17 XXVIII | come, then, to the second charge, that of insult to a more
18 XXIX(77)| chapters which deal with the charge of Disloyalty, religiosus
19 XXXV | seven hills, I judicially charge to say whether that Roman
20 XLII | being worthless to trade, a charge sufficiently refuted by
21 XLII | are called up on another charge of injuries committed, and
22 XLIV | brought into court on the charge peculiar to them 115, who
23 XLIX | presumed to be true. On no charge whatever ought that to be
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