Book, Paragraph

  1   I,   2|        other things with which the life of man is surrounded, in
  2   I,  11|     serpent by his bite takes away life; a reproach, forsooth, to
  3   I,  18|         all things, and takes away life from every sentient being.
  4   I,  22|           share of the bounties of life accrues, and to you no greater,
  5   I,  29|        lest elements pregnant with life should be numbed by settling
  6   I,  31|            throughout the whole of life fall on bended knee, and
  7   I,  33|            on the first day of his life with an idea of that Great
  8   I,  40|      because he breathed forth his life not willingly, but in consequence
  9   I,  40|          was unjustly hurried from life? Others without number,
 10   I,  49|            lips-though, as long as life remained, they wearied with
 11   I,  49|           to live a more abandoned life after they had wasted their
 12   I,  50|            the dead He recalled to life; and not less surely did
 13   I,  51|          is revealed as the god of life? I shall not say, did he
 14   I,  52|         and to restore feeling and life to bodies long cold in death.
 15   I,  57|           or in his own person and life has sketched out your system,
 16   I,  62|           in like manner robbed of life and light when raving as
 17   I,  62|            the conditions of human life? The death of which you
 18   I,  65|            to the utmost limits of life you should be free from
 19  II,   1|      neither extended the light of life to all, nor delivered all
 20  II,   2|            filled with the stir of life, and without whom there
 21  II,   7|             whether the earth gave life to him as to worms and mice,
 22  II,   8|          pure drought, is there in life any kind of business demanding
 23  II,   8|            the different stages of life to the goal of age? Do you
 24  II,  11|           to call the dead back to life; to put an end to the sufferings
 25  II,  12|          up their fathers' mode of life, and attach themselves to
 26  II,  16|          lust and anger, spend our life in shameful deeds, and are
 27  II,  16|          are born, how you leap to life? Will you, laying aside
 28  II,  16|        brought forth and sent into life from our mothers' wombs.
 29  II,  16|         our aim in the business of life, which presses so much upon
 30  II,  17|            nature, which gave them life, had chosen to give to them
 31  II,  18|       other furniture which family life requires.These are not the
 32  II,  18|     practical knowledge. But now a life of want and in need of many
 33  II,  22|       sprung from the fountains of life, before he makes acquaint-ante
 34  II,  22|      during the former part of his life. Will he not, then, stand
 35  II,  23|          both for city and country life, will he indeed be able
 36  II,  23|         the equipment by which the life of man is surrounded and
 37  II,  25|   proceeding from the fountains of life? This is that precious being
 38  II,  26|            the limits within which life is usually closed. For whatever
 39  II,  27|             and bringing an end of life which may not be escaped
 40  II,  27|         assaults, they indeed have life given to them only for present
 41  II,  30|         virtues by regard to which life is more stinted in its pleasures,
 42  II,  30|          feeling characteristic of life perishes, and is lost; it
 43  II,  30|           to restrict your mode of life within narrow limits, not
 44  II,  31|           do no evil, and pass his life in obedience to duty and
 45  II,  33|      whether we deserve to receive life and be freed from the law
 46  II,  34|           be enriched with eternal life?
 47  II,  35|            the line midway between life and death, are not all whatever
 48  II,  35|         and beginning of birth and life; but that which has an entrance
 49  II,  35|     entrance into and beginning of life in its first stages, it
 50  II,  36|            deign to confer eternal life upon souls also, although
 51  II,  36|            deities, but that their life is kept up by God's grace,
 52  II,  38|           enumeration of which all life would be too short, contribute
 53  II,  40|   furniture for the wants of daily life, borrowing help for their
 54  II,  40|      remote nations at the risk of life, and, in exchanging goods
 55  II,  41|           such repasts; that their life should be happy and prosperous
 56  II,  46|           very acts in which man's life is passed and employed to
 57  II,  49|           of perfection, and their life has never wavered and sunk
 58  II,  52|            filled with the stir of life. What if it is not these,
 59  II,  55|           and think that otherwise life is pernicious and fatal.
 60  II,  57|     survive the end of our earthly life; that one believes that
 61  II,  62|        open to them if they lead a life of temperance, and that
 62  II,  62|    themselves all the pleasures of life, let the Magi soften and
 63  II,  64|           He says, the fountain of life is open, and no one is hindered
 64  II,  64|           one to choose his lot in life; nor can another's choice
 65  II,  65|            assign them everlasting life. For if you believe that
 66  II,  65|            can receive from no one life and salvation, except from
 67  II,  65|            the door, so to say, of life; by Him alone is there access
 68  II,  66|       allowed to enter on the true life. For as to that with which
 69  II,  67|            your habits and mode of life, who have gone over to other
 70  II,  69|         other arts by which social life has been built up and refined,-
 71  II,  70|         and breathed the breath of life. So, then, at a certain
 72  II,  71|       beyond this it is that man's life cannot be prolonged? The
 73  II,  76|            us with respect to this life, nor has any help been promised
 74  II,  77|           bodies, do not rob us of life, but relieve us of our skins,
 75 III,  12|        will ever come to an end of life, is devoid of bodily features,
 76 III,  22|           know, that their mode of life may be more civilized. But
 77 III,  22|           earth by their length of life. This, then, is the question;
 78 III,  24|            men all the comforts of life? Does the Deity not impart
 79 III,  39|          after passing through the life of men, there are no dii
 80 III,  42|     affairs and occasions of human life; especially as you yourselves
 81  IV,  21|          next place maintained the life given to him by nourishment
 82  IV,  24|           loss of the blessings of life should be used to excite
 83  IV,  32|           privately reviewing your life; but that wounds very keenly
 84  IV,  36|        enemies, for those still in life, and those freed from the
 85   V,   1|           deity in turn, "With the life. With a fish," rejoined
 86   V,   7|            the streaming blood his life flies; but the Great Mother
 87   V,   7|           Attis may be restored to life: he does not permit it.
 88   V,   8|          be said to have her whole life bounded by the limits of
 89   V,  14|     appealed to Jupiter to restore life to his paramour: Jupiter
 90  VI,   2|          touched by passion live a life of suffering, and are weakened
 91  VI,   7|       nation, how he was bereft of life and light by the slave of
 92  VI,  23|        other things which have not life.
 93 VII,   3|       melting on the coals, or the life only of the victim is offered
 94 VII,   4|           see rivers of blood, the life fleeing away with the blood,
 95 VII,   4|            still bounding with the life left in it, and the trembling,
 96 VII,   9|         with my blood, and that my life and innocence are made to
 97 VII,   9|            Is it not one breath of life which sways both them and
 98 VII,  11|           unhappy ones, who lead a life of tears in the meanest
 99 VII,  16|      manner moved by the breath of life. What is there more artistic
100 VII,  18|       difference is there with the life of what animal this debt
101 VII,  26|            nay rather, their whole life was full of guilt, for they
102 VII,  28|      communication is kept up, its life must be crushed out, and
103 VII,  42|          be forced to hurry out of life by contagious pestilences?
104 VII,  42|      before they tasted the joy of life they should feel the bitterness
105 VII,  43|        preserve him to the joys of life who was miserable and wishing
106 VII,  44|        stages reached that term of life at which, as is related
107 VII,  44| thunderbolt drove him at once from life and light. But we leave
108 VII,  50|            blood was shed, and the life even failed, the vitals
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