Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   6|        would lend an ear for a little to His salutary and peaceful
 2   I,  21|   seasonable showers; from our little fields let them drive away
 3   I,  36|      in company with frogs and little fishes? Is it Aesculapius
 4   I,  45|  carried home their beds who a little before were borne on the
 5  II,   1|    Christ, turning aside for a little from the defence primarily
 6  II,   7|     all at once, but by adding little by little? why it is that
 7  II,   7|        but by adding little by little? why it is that all fluids,
 8  II,  14|         But though a man of no little wisdom, and of accurate
 9  II,  26|      forgot what it knew but a little before, and that its power
10  II,  49|     quite well, because in one little nail he suffered no pain?
11  II,  49|        esteemed, not merely of little importance, but even of
12  II,  52|       in these secret and very little known means for producing
13  II,  53|       law of death, and are of little strength, and that perishable;
14  II,  54| carefully, and examine with no little pains, test, while we think
15  II,  57|     they are allowed to live a little longer, and then come under
16  II,  71|        are nearly, or to add a little to the time, altogether,
17  II,  71|      on disease, are young and little children, who should still
18  II,  73|       which were adopted but a little while ago, called Graeca
19 III,   2|     order from which we were a little ago compelled to diverge,
20 III,   5|        this,-nay, as we said a little before, it may not be possible
21 III,  35|      be gods whom you set up a little ago in its parts without
22  IV,   7|     facts themselves have very little effect in suggesting to
23  IV,  26|     limits of disgrace, into a little ant, that he might, forsooth,
24  IV,  37|       been celebrated with too little care, and because their
25  IV,  37|   understood that they feel no little wrath on account of the
26   V,   3|       the son of Saturn had so little foresight, that he either
27   V,   4|     Jupiter? For what shows so little foresight as to confess
28   V,   8|         rather a mere child, a little girl, since we admit that
29   V,   9|        not been able for but a little time even to keep from speaking
30   V,  17|        is the very pine, but a little before swaying to and fro
31   V,  21|   great recklessness, he had a little before fallen into, he returns
32   V,  22|      mortal is there, with but little sense even of what becomes
33   V,  26|     softened, lays aside for a little the sadness of her mind;
34   V,  26|         and transferred to the little chest."
35  VI,   3|   habitations, to give to them little huts, to build lockfast
36  VI,   3|      by quaking, timorous, and little mice?
37  VI,  11|       you make supplication to little images of men and human
38  VI,  11|        suppose that these very little images are gods, and besides
39  VI,  11|      first part of this book a little more fully, and cited with
40  VI,  12|       rays of light to place a little cap on the Sun's head, how
41  VI,  13|       feeling in forming those little images, adoring them as
42  VI,  13|       when he knew that, but a little before, the very Jupiter
43  VI,  14|   beast, from cooking-pots and little jars, from candlesticks
44  VI,  15|       cause things which but a little before were without feeling,
45  VI,  18|    gods contract themselves in little statuettes, and are compressed
46  VI,  26|        winged sandals, staves, little timbrels, pipes, psalteries,
47  VI,  26|  protruding and of great size, little drinking cups, pincers,
48  VI,  26|  actions, just as if they were little boys, by the preternatural
49 VII,   1|        ground that we pay very little respect to the gods; which,
50 VII,   6|   disturbed by the offences of little men, and wounded if a creature,
51 VII,   8|      matter of payment? and as little boys, to induce them to
52 VII,   8|       from their wailings, get little sparrows, dolls, ponies,
53 VII,   8|        their sin; and there is little hesitation to do wrong,
54 VII,   9|  celebrate your games with too little reverence and care? did
55 VII,  12|  lambkins, the poor man burn a little incense, and a small piece
56 VII,  20|      to the gods only wool and little bristles torn from the victims?
57 VII,  25|       usually done, take these little bits as sweet dainties,
58 VII,  32|       in forgetfulness? Or, as little boys are frightened into
59 VII,  34|       between themselves and a little ant, they would cease, indeed,
60 VII,  36|       have any charm except to little children, coarsely and vulgarly
61 VII,  42|      the grown-up maidens, the little boys, finally the young
62 VII,  49|  colour-not smooth, but having little corners standing out, and
63 App     |        pantomimist halts for a little, or the player, being wearied,
64 App     |         being wearied, rests a little; who declare that the dancer
65 App     |        pantomimist halts for a little, the player, being wearied,
66 App     |         being wearied, rests a little, that puer matrimus happens
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