Book,  Par.

1    II,     70|     he was spoken of in their vulgar talk as the father of the
2   III,     15|       to the pollution of the vulgar gaze, and circulate a story
3   III,     86|     born at Delos, as was the vulgar belief. They had in their
4    IV,     19|    wretched amusement for the vulgar, had become at once so indecent
5    IV,     82|    evil omens." They began in vulgar fashion to trace ill-luck
6    VI,     29|     evil, again, are not what vulgar opinion accounts them; many
7   XIV,     64| cohorts, Faenius Rufus, for a vulgar popularity, which he owed
8    XV,     43|      of a deformed person and vulgar wit, originally introduced
9    XV,     82|       is doubtful. For as the vulgar are ever ready to think
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