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1 IV | imitation is implanted in man from childhood, one difference
2 VI | may say, by the poets to a man; in fact, every play contains
3 VI | showing what kind of things a man chooses or avoids. Speeches,
4 VIII | are the incidents in one man’s life which cannot be reduced
5 VIII | are many actions of one man out of which we cannot make
6 VIII | that as Heracles was one man, the story of Heracles must
7 XIII | spectacle of a virtuous man brought from prosperity
8 XIII | Nor, again, that of a bad man passing from adversity to
9 XIII | fear by the misfortune of a man like ourselves. Such an
10 XIII | these two extremes—that of a man who is not eminently good
11 XVII | madness. In the one case a man can take the mould of any
12 XVII | stated briefly. A certain man is absent from home for
13 XVIII| the critics now expect one man to surpass all others in
14 XX | itself significant. For "man" or "white" does not express
15 XX | whether one or many, as "man" or "men"; or the modes
16 XX | nouns—"the definition of man," for example—but it may
17 XX | parts, the definition of man by the unity of the thing
18 XXII | Such is the riddle: "A man I saw who on another man
19 XXII | man I saw who on another man had glued the bronze by
20 XXII | kai aeikes,~Yet a small man, worthless and unseemly,~
21 XXIV | words, at once brings in a man, or woman, or other personage;
22 XXIV | as in the Mysians, the man who has come from Tegea
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