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1    VIII|        of Homer ever changes his form. But she, in no way frightened,
2       X|        order to participate in a form of wisdom that was in vogue
3      XI|         ever boasted of any such form of wisdom. It follows then
4   XXIII|       the plague was seen in the form of an aged man, a beggar
5   XXIII|           as follows : " For the form of the plague -- and it
6    XXVI| disguises itself by assuming the form of a woman : and the latter
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