Book
1 1 | earnest and in play, by word, deed, and act, will still be
2 3 | one another in word and deed;—although inferior to those
3 3 | show, not in word but in deed, how greatly we prize your
4 4 | their feelings in word or deed, he should give way to them;
5 6 | accomplishing this by word or deed, or has any way great or
6 9 | stranger, shall have his evil deed engraven on his face and
7 9 | suffocating him, whether he do the deed by his own hand, or by the
8 9 | with his own hand and the deed be done in passion, in the
9 9 | making a distinction. For a deed is done from passion either
10 9 | impulse, and are sorry for the deed immediately afterwards;
11 9 | having been insulted in deed or word, men pursue revenge,
12 9 | with his own hand, and the deed be done in a moment of anger,
13 9 | moment of anger repeats the deed, let him be an exile, and
14 9 | the perpetrator of such a deed shall be amenable to many
15 9 | let the perpetrator of the deed undergo a purification and
16 9 | and is the author of the deed in intention and design,
17 9 | homicidal soul which the deed has given life for life,
18 9 | reverence his elder in word and deed; he shall respect any one
19 10| of any impiety in word or deed, any one who happens to
20 10| to transgress in word or deed, and less foolish, because
21 10| sacrifice is impure. Whether the deed has been done in earnest,
22 11| words light as air, in very deed the greatest enmities and
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