Book
1 1 | of my virility~before the proper season, but even deferred
2 3 | good thing which is thy proper possession and thy~own;
3 3 | entirety, and~tell thyself its proper name, and the names of the
4 4 | in~accordance with their proper constitution, and to hold
5 4 | given to everything has its proper value and~proportion. For
6 5 | it has once produced its~proper fruit. As a horse when he
7 5 | judgements~it may think proper to make, such it makes for
8 5 | themselves~obstacles to my proper acts, man becomes to me
9 5 | assigned to everything its proper~portion, and has brought
10 6 | thyself~in conformity to thy proper constitution, to which end
11 6 | affectionate, strenuous in~all proper acts. Strive to continue
12 8 | and is dissolved into its proper parts, which~are elements
13 8 | satisfaction to a man to do the proper works of a man. Now~it is
14 8 | works of a man. Now~it is a proper work of a man to be benevolent
15 8 | things~however which are proper to the understanding no
16 8 | and act~conformably to its proper constitution. Is this change
17 8 | to a stone~which is not proper to a stone. If then there
18 9 | universe produce fruit; at the proper~seasons each produces it.
19 9 | perturbations and maintain its proper good. Nor did I, he~says,
20 11| universe,~and others about the proper constitution of man?~ At
21 11| turn thee aside from~thy proper action, so neither let them
22 12| when it has ceased at its~proper time, suffers no evil because
23 12| life, if it cease at its proper time, suffers no~evil for
24 12| terminated~this series at the proper time, has he been ill dealt
25 12| ill dealt with. But the~proper time and the limit nature
|