Book
1 2 | of manners occurring in various actions, fortunes, dispositions—
2 2 | Athenian. There would be various exhibitions: one man, like
3 3 | unacquainted with the arts and the various devices which are suggested
4 3 | because we have gone through various governments and settlements,
5 5 | may readily supply their various wants, and entertain one
6 6 | severally every month the various districts, in order that
7 7 | characters of the citizens various and dissimilar:—this is
8 7 | differently suited for our various uses of them; whereas no
9 7 | and sun and moon, and the various regulations about these
10 7 | has arisen. And in these various kinds of imitation one man
11 8 | produces and nourishes the various articles of food, sometimes
12 8 | village they shall settle various classes of craftsmen, with
13 9 | then; there are hurts of various kinds done by the citizens
14 9 | hurt and injustice, and the various complications of the voluntary
15 9 | as we are able, of their various kinds. The greatest cause
16 10| and act according to their various imaginations about the Gods;
17 11| order at the same time the various circumstances of individuals,
18 12| a view to taxation, for various reasons, every man ought
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