bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter, Paragraphgrey = Comment text

 1   I,     I,  7|         hearing; odours, good or bad, that of smell; savours,
 2   I,   III,  7|       the Son extend to good and bad, to just and unjust, by
 3  II,     V,  1|       appear to wish well to the bad, but to be animated by a
 4  II,     V,  2|          as of natures; and if a bad nature cannot do good, neither
 5  II,     V,  2|        had he commanded good and bad alike to be invited, without
 6  II,     V,  2|        had sent to call good and bad alike, to be bound hand
 7  II,     V,  3|          able to maintain that a bad man is not also unjust,
 8  II,     V,  4| affirming that it is written, "A bad tree cannot produce good
 9  II,     V,  4|  everything which singly makes a bad man. For as no one considers
10  II,    IX    |       Creatures, Whether Good or Bad; And on the Causes of Them.~
11  II,    IX,  2|     nothing else than to be made bad. For it is certain that
12  II,    IX,  8|       will be separated from the bad, and the just from the unjust,
13  II,     X,  6|          if, on account of those bad effects which we bring upon
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