Book, Chapter

 1   IV,   3, p.  167|          agree that from the one fragrance of any particular object
 2   IV,   3, p.  168|          produced it by its own [fragrance]. But these are all earthly
 3   IV,  15, p.  192|         virtue, send forth a (d) fragrance that comes from purity,
 4   IV,  15, p.  193|    sharer of the Father's divine fragrance communicable to none other,
 5   IV,  15, p.  194|       Unbegotten, and craves the fragrance of the better. But it is
 6    V,   1, p.  233| perchance might say that, like a fragrance or a ray of light, the Son
 7    V,   1, p.  233|         united to the Father, as fragrance to an ointment and the ray
 8    V,   1, p.  234|       before all ages; while the fragrance being a kind of physical
 9    V,   1, p.  234|         seen to be the liveliest fragrance of the Father, in a mode
10    V,   1, p.  234|         and those like him as "a fragrance of Christ," by their participation
11    V,   1, p.  235|       immaterial and uncorrupted fragrance; for as the God of the Universe
12    V,   1, p.  235|         also is alone called the fragrance of His Father's Essence
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