Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  33|        aye, stamped almost in his mother's womb even, in whom is
 2   I,  34|       allege, has both father and mother, grandfathers, grandmothers,
 3   I,  34|      conceived in the womb of his mother, being completely formed
 4   I,  36|      dashed by lightning from his mother's womb? Is it Mercury, son
 5   I,  36|          were companions of their mother's wanderings, and who were
 6   I,  41|          the temples of the Great Mother, that Phrygian Atys who
 7  II,  52|        wise say that the earth is mother of men, that others join
 8  II,  70|     begotten, and received in his mother's womb the shape and outline
 9  II,  73|           not the sacred rites of mother Ceres, which were adopted
10 III,  26|        Mars himself, and the fair mother of the Desires; to one of
11 III,  30|     Saturn his father and Ops his mother, is reported to have been
12 III,  32|       that the earth is the Great Mother, because it provides all
13 III,  32|       gods; nor, in fine, can the mother of the gods herself, whom
14 III,  41|          Manes, and therefore the mother of the Lares was named Mania;
15  IV,  14|       also Jupiter's son, and the mother who bore him Hyperiona;
16  IV,  14|       third was born of Maia, his mother, and the third Jove; the
17  IV,  14|         whom is no virgin but the mother of Apollo by Vulcan; the
18  IV,  16|      being a wife, and so often a mother, have lost the sanctity
19  IV,  16|    Coryphasia, either to mark her mother, or because she sprung forth
20  IV,  19|           this father and of that mother, do you not feel in your
21  IV,  20|            From Ops, you say, his mother, and from his father Saturn,
22  IV,  22|    begotten. Of Hyperiona, as his mother, you say, and Jupiter, who
23  IV,  26|        make Clitor's daughter the mother of Myrmidon, in Thessaly?
24  IV,  26|     virginal title, and to bear a mother's burden. Moreover, not
25  IV,  27|      Proserpina after Adonis; her mother, Ceres, after some rustic
26  IV,  27|          Mars; Venus herself, the mother of Aeneas, and founder of
27  IV,  29|          Venus; to whom the great mother was bound in marriage; what
28  IV,  35|       shameful to say, Venus, the mother of the race of Mars, and
29  IV,  35|          a vile harlot. The Great Mother, too, adorned with her sacred
30   V,   5|            the birth of the Great Mother of the gods, and the origin
31   V,   5|        men; from which this Great Mother, too, as she is called,
32   V,   5|       month, being named from his mother rock. In him there had been
33   V,   6|          she is kept alive by the mother of the gods with apples,
34   V,   6|           the name Attis. Him the mother of the gods loved exceedingly,
35   V,   7|      their marriage joys. But the mother of the gods, knowing the
36   V,   7|         life flies; but the Great Mother of the gods gathers the
37   V,   7|          into purple violets. The mother of the gods sheds tears
38   V,   8|           threw, was produced the mother of the gods. What do you
39   V,   8|          heavenly powers? Did the mother of the gods, then, not exist
40   V,   8|         to be believed, the Great Mother, too, must be said to have
41   V,   8|          the deities is not their mother, but their daughter; nay,
42   V,   9|          having bemired the Great Mother of the gods with the filth
43   V,   9|        Jupiter himself? While the mother of the gods was then sleeping
44   V,   9|       detestable passion upon his mother? and could he not be turned
45   V,   9|            trying how soundly his mother slept, and what she would
46   V,   9|          craft, did he assail his mother with violence, and begin
47   V,   9|          execrable lust after his mother?
48   V,  10|            And why, then, did his mother resist with the greatest
49   V,  10|           cautious and foreseeing mother of the gods, who, that she
50   V,  13|        apples who had been made a mother by an apple. After her offspring
51   V,  13|          and fled from. The Great Mother loved him-if as a grandmother
52   V,  13|           what Midas dreaded? The Mother entered bearing the very
53   V,  14|         dead. Say, again, did the mother of the gods, then, with
54   V,  16|         into the sanctuary of the mother of the gods? Is it not in
55   V,  16|       they not mark this, how the Mother adorned with early flowers
56   V,  16|           which the tower-bearing Mother, along with the weeping
57   V,  17|           up in the temple of the Mother of the gods next, like some
58   V,  20|      Diespiter, burning after his mother Ceres with evil passions
59   V,  20|          district to be Jupiter's mother, and yet not daring to seek
60   V,  20|           rob of her chastity his mother, who feared nothing of the
61   V,  20|         known and discovered. His mother burns, foams, gasps, boils
62   V,  21|          the rage of his violated mother. He pours forth prayers,
63   V,  21|          tegmine. Approaching his mother sadly and with downcast
64   V,  21|           Jupiter, but not as her mother was, for she bore a daughter
65   V,  22|   bearable. Did he lust after his mother also, after his daughter
66   V,  23|          and bringing them to his mother, still hot with rage, as
67   V,  32|         says Jupiter lay with his mother, does not mean the incestuous
68   V,  37|         have intercourse with his mother Ceres: as was explained
69   V,  39|        the sanctuary of the Great Mother, is it not in imitation
70  VI,  11|   Pessinus a flint instead of the mother of the gods; the Romans
71  VI,  25|           a soldier's helmet; the mother of the gods, with her timbrel;
72 VII,  22| established on no solid basis? To mother Earth, they say, is sacrificed
73 VII,  22|         if because the Earth is a mother she is in like manner to
74 VII,  26|           Etruria, the parent and mother of superstition, acquainted
75 VII,  32|          says my opponent, of the mother of the gods is to-day. Do
76 VII,  33| passionate impulses? Is the Great Mother rendered more calm, more
77 VII,  49|                 49. But the Great Mother, also, says my opponent,
78 VII,  50|     colour and dark body, was the mother of the gods? or who, again,
79 VII,  50|            where was the Phrygian mother at the time when the commonwealth
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