[ XXXVI. Take heed lest at any time thou stand so affected, though towards ]
[ XXXVII. How know we whether Socrates were so eminent indeed, and of so ]
[ XXXVIII. For it is a thing very possible, that a man should be a very ]
[ XXXIX. Free from all compulsion in all cheerfulness and alacrity thou ]
[ XL. Then hath a man attained to the estate of perfection in his life and ]
[ XLI. Can the Gods, who are immortal, for the continuance of so many ages ]
[ XLII. What object soever, our reasonable and sociable faculty doth meet ]
[ XLIII. When thou hast done well, and another is benefited by thy action, ]
[ XLIV. The nature of the universe did once certainly before it was ]