Book
1 2 | away from reason~with a certain pain and unconscious contraction;
2 3 | which thus open, and~have a certain fashion contrary to the
3 3 | he will be able to see a certain maturity and comeliness;~
4 4 | towards its purpose, under~certain conditions however; and
5 4 | portion given to me from certain earth,~and that which is
6 4 | must proceed only from a certain~persuasion, as of what is
7 4 | indeed~so far as it has a certain utility? For thou now rejectest~
8 4 | of~these bodies after a certain continuance, whatever it
9 4 | still a universe. But can a certain order subsist in thee, and~
10 4 | no mere succession, but a certain wonderful~relationship.~
11 5 | even they are misled~by a certain show of reason. But if thou
12 5 | any man should conceive certain~things as being really good,
13 6 | every duty is made up of~certain parts. These it is thy duty
14 6 | accommodate themselves up~to a certain point to those who are not
15 8 | reported to thee that a certain~person speaks ill of thee.
16 9 | after them by virtue of a certain original movement of Providence,~
17 9 | to which it moved from a certain beginning to this ordering~
18 9 | things, having conceived certain principles of the things
19 9 | unjustly who does not do a certain thing; not only~he who does
20 9 | not only~he who does a certain thing.~ Thy present opinion
21 10| reason, whether this at certain periods~is consumed by fire
22 10| if thou~wast removed to certain islands of the Happy. But
23 10| all things which have a certain~constitution, whatever harm
24 11| if thou dost abstain from certain~faults, still thou hast
25 11| many things are done with a certain~reference to circumstances.
26 11| good, but only about~some certain things, that is, things
27 12| tempest thou hast in thyself a certain ruling intelligence. And
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