Book
1 1 | citizens who are of the same race and live in the same cities
2 1 | nations who are of a different race, is a far milder form of
3 2 | pitying the toils which our race is born to undergo, have
4 3 | small sparks of the human race preserved on the tops of
5 3 | as time advanced and the race multiplied, the world came
6 3 | last extremity, the human race may still grow and increase.
7 3 | for poets are a divine race and often in their strains,
8 3 | promised that as time and the race went forward they would
9 3 | were governed by a single race of royal brothers, and had
10 3 | fitted to produce sturdy race able to live in the open
11 4 | Argive descent; and the race of Cretans which has the
12 4 | if the colonists are one race, which like a swarm of bees
13 4 | friendship in the community of race, and language, and language,
14 4 | a higher and more divine race, to be the kings and rulers
15 4 | ourselves are a superior race, and rule over them. In
16 4 | demons, who are a superior race, and they with great case
17 4 | that in a manner the human race naturally partakes of immortality,
18 5 | himself contends in the race, blasting the fair fame
19 6 | just that part of the human race which is by nature prone
20 6 | understand that the human race either had no beginning
21 7 | you wish, that the human race is not to be despised, but
22 8 | and let them run on the race–ground itself; those who
23 9 | unexpiated crimes of his race, an ever–recurring curse;—
24 11| indicted for dishonouring his race by any one who likes, before
25 12| curses on himself and his race, nor to use unseemly supplications
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