Book, Paragraph

  1   I,   1|       driven from the regions of earth,-I have resolved, so far
  2   I,   2|          began to be used on the earth, what phenomenon, unseen
  3   I,   2|          is wont to act upon the earth? Has the moon ceased to
  4   I,   2|    showers not prosper? Does the earth refuse to receive the seed
  5   I,   3|      plague was brought upon the earth after the Christian religion
  6   I,   3|   engulphed by huge rents of the earth? or did they enjoy a condition
  7   I,   8|        are a purification of the earth; nor did that wise man dread
  8   I,  13|       has there been no peace on earth, has there been no season
  9   I,  17|      which are in the animals of earth. And what therefore follows
 10   I,  21|        mouth the products of the earth retain their natural qualities;
 11   I,  23|       with the coarser matter of earth.
 12   I,  30|  property you are? whose is that earth which you till? whose is
 13   I,  30|     forth that they were born on earth, and that at a fixed period
 14   I,  33|       trees, if the clods of the earth, if stones animated by vital
 15   I,  37|      lived on the produce of the earth, you nevertheless upbraid
 16   I,  51|         on the vulgar produce of earth; and was it not a divine
 17   I,  52|       Whatever noxious herbs the earth brings forth from its bosom,
 18   I,  60|        substance, have come upon earth and adapted itself to the
 19   I,  60|         decreed to come upon the earth such as He is in His own
 20  II,   2|   endures, by whom all things on earth and all in heaven are quickened,
 21  II,   5|       spread abroad over all the earth? that already there is no
 22  II,   7|      countless ills? whether the earth gave life to him as to worms
 23  II,   8|        done? Do you break up the earth with the plough, and fill
 24  II,  13|       the soul to flee froth the earth, and, as much as in it lies,
 25  II,  13|      forth from the bosom of the earth, aged, grey-haired, bowed
 26  II,  18|      inmost heavens, but here on earth have they all been painfully
 27  II,  19|      measure the confines of the earth? Now, if the soul had brought
 28  II,  19|    busied with them over all the earth, nor would any race of men
 29  II,  20|   imagine a place dug out in the earth, fit for dwelling in, formed
 30  II,  22|         say what the sun is, the earth, seas, stars, clouds, mist,
 31  II,  37|     rashly seek these regions of earth, that they might live enclosed
 32  II,  37|       showers come down upon the earth to temper droughts? But
 33  II,  37|     heard in the world, and this earth should be still with the
 34  II,  40| creatures; using violence to the earth that it might not give forth
 35  II,  40|         strength in subduing the earth, should be compelled to
 36  II,  40|        the unknown bowels of the earth into materials, and to purposes
 37  II,  43|          men devise over all the earth with guilty purpose, and
 38  II,  49|    suffered no pain? or that the earth is made of gold, because
 39  II,  52|         of the wise say that the earth is mother of men, that others
 40  II,  61|       the sun is larger than the earth, or measures only a foot
 41  II,  63|          race began to be on the earth; when souls were first bound
 42  II,  75|        in different parts of the earth, have made the discoverers
 43 III,   3|        And as in the kingdoms of earth we are in no wise constrained
 44 III,   8|      Creator of the creatures of earth, only that, by intercourse
 45 III,  11|         rouse them to harass the earth with every ill, and every
 46 III,  17|          forward. For as, if the earth be said to be of glass,
 47 III,  22|        surpass the whole race of earth by their length of life.
 48 III,  31|      title because he covers the earth with water. If, then, by
 49 III,  31|          shaker of the trembling earth.
 50 III,  32|        of you have said that the earth is the Great Mother, because
 51 III,  32|     others declare that the same earth is Ceres, because it brings
 52 III,  32|         are all names of the one earth, and it alone is signified
 53 III,  34|         be the discoverer of the earth's fruits has no existence,
 54 III,  35|           The moon, the sun, the earth, the ether, the stars, are
 55  IV,   8|       were no bees at all on the earth then, or if we men were
 56  IV,   8|         spring up, and be on the earth, that you thought it right
 57  IV,  14|          is above all. Under the earth is the second, who boasts
 58  IV,  28|      race, and to the frailty of earth. For who, if only he recognises
 59  IV,  31|         or could not hold to the earth: and yet do you dare to
 60  IV,  37|       they have often shaken the earth with their roaring, and
 61   V,   1|          could be called down to earth. With this knowledge the
 62   V,   1|         drew down Jupiter to the earth, and asked from him the
 63   V,   2|        they gave to creatures of earth an opportunity to bind them?
 64   V,   2|         way to bring him down to earth. This only do I wish to
 65   V,   3|      majesty was dragged down to earth, and, standing on a petty
 66   V,   5|        and Pyrrha threw upon the earth, at that time emptied of
 67   V,   5|       than himself; he contemned earth, heaven, and the stars.
 68   V,   6|          and swallowed up by the earth; from them there suddenly
 69   V,   7|         been cut off, and throws earth on them, having first covered
 70   V,   9|       the gods with the filth of earth, when you have not been
 71   V,  12|          one of the creatures of earth, or one of the gods, and
 72   V,  12|    concealed in the bosom of the earth, did it lay hold of the
 73   V,  14|          also commit them to the earth to be hid from sight; and
 74   V,  14|    dispersed in the bosom of the earth, did she indeed wash and
 75   V,  15|        have been driven from the earth, whether it is consistent
 76   V,  15|          if they are anywhere on earth, and glow with the fires
 77   V,  23|      anger, be should remove the earth from under our feet, extinguish
 78   V,  24|       again in the bowels of the earth. Now when Ceres did not
 79   V,  24|        quest in all parts of the earth.
 80   V,  27|         and do they traverse the earth's vast extent with lamps
 81   V,  31|         and even found graves on earth? was it not you? While,
 82   V,  32|         and Ceres instead of the earth. And he, again, who says
 83   V,  32|       goddess has sunk under the earth, and unites with Orcus to
 84   V,  34|       rain into the bosom of the earth was spoken of as the union
 85   V,  35|          the rain, Ceres for the earth, and for Libera and father
 86   V,  35|         casting of seed into the earth, so you ought to say what
 87   V,  37|   Summanus sprung forth from the earth, borne along in a four-horse
 88   V,  37|       her with himself under the earth: the burying of the seed,
 89   V,  37|    before, under these names the earth and falling rain are spoken
 90   V,  37|     Ceres, who was named for the earth, the story passed to the
 91   V,  40|        than to term and call the earth and rain, or anything else,-
 92   V,  40|        and the moistening of the earth, by charges against the
 93   V,  40|    speaks of seeds buried in the earth, or anything else,-for in
 94   V,  43|       that the irrigation of the earth was meant by the union of
 95   V,  43|         wines scattered over the earth by the limbs of Liber torn
 96  VI,   3|      these things are made up of earth, and of the lowest dregs
 97  VI,   4|      while they wander above the earth, are steadily and everywhere
 98  VI,  14|         as if all nations on the earth were present, make one speech,
 99  VI,  23|    throughout the whole world by earth quakes and tempests-what
100  VI,  24|     hearts of men, and no one on earth were called guilty and guiltless,
101 VII,  19|          and that underneath the earth there are no Plutonian realms
102 VII,  22|        no solid basis? To mother Earth, they say, is sacrificed
103 VII,  22|      have been sacrificed to the Earth from respect for its fruitfulness,
104 VII,  22|          her, and if because the Earth is a mother she is in like
105 VII,  22|  slaughter pregnant swine to the Earth because she is even more
106 VII,  28|        creatures sprung from the earth, the same things are either
107 VII,  35|        given to the creatures of earth which the Author of the
108 VII,  38|       What is the meaning of the earth's roarings, the earthquakes,
109 VII,  44|      serpent, crawling along the earth as worms are wont to do,
110 VII,  45|         just as a dull animal of earth, he seeks a conveyance on
111 VII,  46|   himself, or any opening in the earth? Do you declare, say yourselves,
112 VII,  46|           or some opening in the earth, or some caverns and vaults,
113 VII,  50|      that a stone taken from the earth, having no feeling, of sooty
114 VII,  50|  whatever is remote, to whom the earth is a point, and by whose
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