Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  29|       vice should increase, and wickedness remain incorrigible. For
 2  II,  30| conviction not only leads on to wickedness, from the very freedom to
 3  II,  41|        places of blood and open wickedness, in the one of which they
 4  II,  43|          in which every kind of wickedness should be committed daily,
 5  II,  50|         for them to be led into wickedness at the suggestion of some
 6  IV,  28|        pass by no form of vice, wickedness, error, without bringing
 7   V,  21|  forgetting what evils and what wickedness, and how great recklessness,
 8  VI,  24|       light in myriads from the wickedness of wrongdoers, how is it
 9  VI,  24|  innumerable forms of crime and wickedness, we see that even the temples
10 VII,   9|   innocence are made to pay for wickedness with which I have nothing
11 VII,   9|        devised so many forms of wickedness, that they can hardly be
12 VII,  21|    crime there is in this, what wickedness or guilt has been contracted,
13 VII,  48|     deities on account of their wickedness. For if on account of the
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