Book, Chapter

1    1,   6|   Homeric verse there was no private tutor to stifle budding
2    2,  35|     was the dining-room of a private gentleman, but rather that
3    3,  96|   heavy and massive were his private parts, that you would have
4    5, 151| figures either by the mouth, private parts or elsewhere, and
5    5, 154|   dignity, select from their private wardrobe of the finest linen,
6    5, 154|      pernicious luxury their private banquets, the choice of
7    6     |      have all the public and private virtues. One knows the severe
8    6     | important role in public and private affairs, and the men convinced
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