Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  48|          applying His hand to the parts affected, or by the command
 2   I,  62|          by bringing together any parts. Who, then, you ask, was
 3  II,  16|        which remains by the lower parts; and we are supported by
 4  II,  19|      universe, of which these are parts. For what else do these
 5  II,  28|         come to these, the lowest parts of the universe? what properties
 6  II,  37|          was necessary that these parts too should be peopled, and
 7  II,  49|       whole should draw to it its parts, not the whole be brought
 8  II,  49|           whole be brought to its parts. For what if you were to
 9  II,  59|           material have the inner parts of men's bodies been formed
10  II,  63|      before us have gone; in what parts or regions of the world
11  II,  68|           and Pompilius the inner parts, having been quite thoroughly
12  II,  75|          when dug up in different parts of the earth, have made
13  II,  77|           to the ground its other parts, not knowing that thus he
14 III,  10|          they disfigured by those parts, the very mention of whose
15 III,  10|          virgin and matron, those parts ever prepared for encounter.
16 III,  12|            completes the union of parts. For whatever is of this
17 III,  14|           and, having no internal parts, as if they were inflated
18 III,  23|         often, suffer temples and parts of cities to fall into ashes
19 III,  35|        set up a little ago in its parts without change of name.
20 III,  35|     deities; nor, if the gods are parts of it, can they be brought
21 III,  35|        feeling throughout all its parts. The moon, the sun, the
22 III,  35|        the stars, are members and parts of the world; but if they
23 III,  35|        the world; but if they are parts and members, they are certainly
24 III,  35|    creatures; for in no thing can parts be the very thing which
25 III,  35|            are gods. For they are parts of the world, not the proper
26 III,  41|      streets laurae. In different parts of his writings, Nigidius
27  IV,   5|            neither fore nor after parts. For whatever is round,
28  IV,  10|          are placed in the hidden parts and members of which we
29  IV,  10|          Or if you say that these parts, too, act under the care
30  IV,  13|       substituting himself in all parts of the world, shows to you
31  IV,  26|            is branded on the soft parts, and marked in the hinder.
32   V,   2| opportunity to bind them? On what parts, then, were those bonds
33   V,   4|         for human blood. And both parts are made to contradict themselves:
34   V,   6|          tearing asunder of these parts there is an immense flow
35   V,   7|           of the gods gathers the parts which had been cut off,
36   V,   9|          fear, touched her secret parts, trying how soundly his
37   V,  10|           stones both had genital parts, and drank in the seed cast
38   V,  11|        suffered the loss of these parts become less arrogant, and
39   V,  11|         his care skilfully to the parts which were to perish, so
40   V,  12|         which flowed and from the parts which were cut off? or at
41   V,  13|         to appease his wrath, the parts cut off.
42   V,  21|         away again from the lower parts.
43   V,  23|           ransacking their inmost parts with glowing knife; and
44   V,  24|          goes on her quest in all parts of the earth.
45   V,  25|        Attica. At that time these parts were inhabited by aborigines
46   V,  25|          groins, displays all the parts which decency hides; and
47   V,  27|         the shameful and indecent parts of the body? and are those
48   V,  27|          sight, what in the privy parts of Baubo, to move to wonder
49   V,  27|           and formed with similar parts? what was there such that,
50   V,  35|     interpretations; or that some parts of them are not ambiguous
51   V,  35|           castrated ram; what the parts of the castrated ram; what
52   V,  35|           disclosure of the privy parts, the shameful charm of the
53   V,  36|          the story, but that some parts are written so as to be
54   V,  37|           angry, and received the parts of a ram as the penalty
55  VI,   7|          itself without the other parts of the body,-for some relate
56  VI,  16|        separate and break up into parts those Olympian and Capitoline
57  VI,  16|    Jupiters, and behold all those parts alone and by themselves
58  VI,  16|           the firm union of their parts from their decaying and
59  VI,  16|         and live under the hollow parts of these statues? that they
60  VI,  16|          noses, and all the other parts on which their excrements
61  VI,  19|           in one, or divided into parts, and into members? For neither
62  VI,  19|          nor, again, divided into parts by his being cut up. For
63  VI,  19|           or it must be said that parts can be the same as the whole,
64  VI,  19|         by gathering together its parts. Moreover, if the same deity
65  VI,  20|         heaven dwell in the inner parts of the images, why do you
66 VII,   2|       kind be less or more in its parts while its own qualities
67 VII,   3|       maintain the union of their parts? And what man is there so
68 VII,   4|         the blood, and the secret parts having been laid open, not
69 VII,  13|        other; and consists of two parts, of the concession of the
70 VII,  24|        polimina, again, are those parts which we with more decency
71 VII,  25|         like to receive all these parts which you term proesicioe,
72 VII,  26|        began to be known in these parts, and won its way into the
73 VII,  34|          noses, and all the other parts of our limbs and muscles,
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