Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  16|       why, when the enemy are slain, am I not an evil augury;
 2   I,  40|     No innocent person foully slain is ever disgraced thereby;
 3   I,  41|        who regard as gods men slain by the most cruel tortures;
 4   I,  62|  power, had been cut down and slain by impious robbers, would
 5   I,  62|   Apollo be said to have been slain in her? If Bacis, if Helenus,
 6   I,  65| suffered His human form to be slain, that from the result they
 7  II,  39|     of them with the blood of slain animals; make no mention
 8  IV,  12|      rejoice that victims are slain in sacrifice to them under
 9  IV,  25|    Polemo say that Pallas was slain, covered with her own blood,
10   V,  19|     sacred mystery, a brother slain by his brothers, parsley
11  VI,   1|  offer the blood of creatures slain in sacrifices, incense,
12 VII,   4|     not this, are victims not slain in sacrifice to the gods,
13 VII,   9|   animal you please, which is slain to mitigate and appease
14 VII,   9|    more just that I should be slain, that I should be killed,
15 VII,   9|      killed, that I should be slain, that you may be soothed,
16 VII,   9|  thing to be destroyed, to be slain for another, or offences
17 VII,  18|   animals? For if victims are slain in sacrifice to the gods,
18 VII,  19|      the blackest victims are slain? Because, says my opponent,
19 VII,  21|  learn from you: If a goat be slain to Jupiter, which is usually
20 VII,  22|      to the virgin Minerva is slain a virgin calf, never forced
21 VII,  29|     and pottages, and victims slain in honour of them, do they
22 VII,  46|       of might that which was slain by Regulus by the assault
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