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1      IX|         that as he advanced in youth he displayed a knowledge
2     XII|        designed to corrupt his youth, and also, as the narrative
3     XXV|       away Antisthenes, a poor youth so serious that he was endeavouring
4    XXVI|  expelled from an incorrigible youth, while the second disguises
5     XXX|    Titus. Then we hear about a youth who was bitten by a mad
6    XXXI|      Then again the licentious youth was clearly the victim of
7    XXXI|       same is true also of the youth who had been driven out
8     XLI| Diogenes, too, with the golden youth of Athens; and, to sum up,
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