Book
1 1 | reformation is the great business of every man while he lives.~
2 5 | decide which are which is the business of the legislator; and he,
3 5 | or he has made them in business, or has acquired by any
4 6 | good beginning is half the business”; and “to have begun well”
5 6 | deal more than half the business, and has never been praised
6 6 | down; this shall be the business of the first day. And on
7 6 | for a single month. Their business is to be at hand and receive
8 6 | engaged in their regular business. They shall make every part
9 6 | each—of the one kind the business will be education, of the
10 6 | expires, let those whose business it is elect another to the
11 6 | a man is engaged in the business of marriage; at such a crisis
12 7 | public and of their household business, as magistrates in the city,
13 7 | the chief concern in the business, the superintendent of youth [
14 8 | or those who come on some business which they have with the
15 10| one who has some special business entrusted to him, if he
16 11| instructors of those who have business in the agora. Enough has
17 12| who comes on some public business from another land, and is
18 12| at leisure from all other business, whether public or private—
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