Book,  Par.

1     I,     70|     shrewd understanding, and a perverse eloquence, who had seduced
2   III,     11|       easily distinguished from perverse misrepresentation by a single
3   III,     67| encouraging Caius Caesar in his perverse and quarrelsome behaviour.
4   III,     79|         he thought to check the perverse ambition of others, while
5   XVI,     18|      seeking promotion out of a perverse vanity which wished to raise
6   XVI,     32|      such an one to gratify his perverse vanity. To him the decrees
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