Book,  Par.

1    II,     41|     for use, there was neither excess nor parsimony except in
2   III,     71|    which had reached boundless excess in everything on which wealth
3    IV,     23|    sycophancy, the absence and excess of which in a corrupt age
4  XIII,     14|      on the other hand, lax to excess. The change did not escape
5  XIII,     30| fostered, had broken into such excess, that freedmen would ask
6   XIV,     21|         and every incentive to excess was offered for sale. Money
7    XV,     59|   display, and occasionally in excess. This suited the taste of
8    XV,     60|      had enfeebled his mind by excess, and his life, accordingly,
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