Book, Chapter

 1    1,  12|      cells, many persons of each sex amusing themselves in such
 2    1,  23|         us, who were of the male sex, at least, even if we had
 3    5, 145|      number of laws dealing with sex is an accurate mirror of
 4    5, 145|         a bed-fellow of the same sex. Cicero, in speaking of
 5    5, 156|      doubtful riddle of a double sex, neither preserving that
 6    5, 160| commented upon the looseness and sex appeal of this dance. Meursius,
 7    6     |         supposed ugliness of the sex, as the savant Paw imagined,
 8    6     |     their bitterness against the sex. Euripides maintained that
 9    6     |         list of the vices of the sex. The first Latin authors
10    6     | prostitution of men by their own sex is the most common. We see
11    6     |          of necessity, that each sex should remain faithful to
12    6     |       villainous persuasion? One sex entered one bed, and men
13    6     |      doubtful riddle of a double sex, neither preserving that
14    6     |         the opposite or the same sex, which result in a waste
15    6     |        heat in the beauty of the sex, and where beauty is only
16    6     |     salute you, whatever be your sex; to your discretion, to
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