[ XXXII. What are their minds and understandings; and what the things that ]
[ XXXIII. Loss and corruption, is in very deed nothing else but change and ]
[ XXXIV. How base and putrid, every common matter is! Water, dust, and ]
[ XXXV. Will this querulousness, this murmuring, this complaining and ]
[ XXXVI. It is all one to see these things for a hundred of years together ]
[ XXXVII. If he have sinned, his is the harm, not mine. But perchance he ]
[ XXXVIII. Either all things by the providence of reason happen unto every ]
[ XXXIX. Sayest thou unto that rational part, Thou art dead; corruption ]
[ XL. Either the Gods can do nothing for us at all, or they can still and ]
[ XLI. 'In my sickness' (saith Epicurus of himself:) 'my discourses were ]