Book
1 1 | such things; and to endure freedom of speech; and to have become~
2 1 | From Apollonius I learned freedom of will and undeviating
3 1 | to equal rights and equal freedom of speech, and the idea
4 1 | respects most of all the freedom of the~governed; I learned
5 2 | feeling of~affection, and freedom, and justice; and to give
6 3 | And this faculty promises freedom from hasty~judgement, and
7 4 | with more quiet or more freedom from~trouble does a man
8 4 | thee from having modesty, freedom, and~everything else, by
9 5 | no love of superfluity, freedom~from trifling magnanimity.
10 5 | consider if~magnanimity, freedom, simplicity, equanimity,
11 6 | friendships; and~how he tolerated freedom of speech in those who opposed
12 7 | rational~constitution is freedom from error and from deception.
13 8 | error is as consistent with freedom as it is to persist in thy~
14 8 | forming thyself hourly to freedom conjoined with~contentment,
15 9 | anything else.~ Let there be freedom from perturbations with
16 10| every several thing and freedom from~negligence; and that
17 10| but with simplicity and~freedom and modesty, after doing
18 11| which had a magisterial~freedom of speech, and by its very
19 11| man's mind is nearer~to freedom from all passion, in the
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