Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|     the chief of the heavenly bodies, with whose light all things
 2   I,   8|     movements of the heavenly bodies produce these evils in certain
 3   I,   8|      brings pestilence on our bodies, and weakens the human race?
 4   I,  38|     compact the very build of bodies; what the perceptions are;
 5   I,  38|       into existence with our bodies themselves; whether it sojourns
 6   I,  38|       have separated from our bodies relaxed in death; whether
 7   I,  45|    left sameness of colour to bodies formerly spotted? Was He
 8   I,  48|     to be eradicated, and the bodies of the weak to return to
 9   I,  48|     power has willed that the bodies of men should endure. What
10   I,  52|   restore feeling and life to bodies long cold in death. Or if
11   I,  55|      as well the minds as the bodies of men; overcome by the
12   I,  55|  sacrifice to surrender their bodies to you and to give their
13  II,   8|       Do you commit your sick bodies to the hands of physicians,
14  II,  13|     men, but souls shut up in bodies?-You, indeed, do not take
15  II,  13|   that you may cleave to your bodies as though inseparably bound
16  II,  16|       down towards our mortal bodies, causes pursue us from the
17  II,  16|       the prostitution of our bodies for hire. And how can the
18  II,  16|    ranked as creatures? Their bodies are built up on bones, and
19  II,  16|   together by sinews; and our bodies are in like manner built
20  II,  16|        on leaving their human bodies, pass into cattle and other
21  II,  22|      they come to their human bodies with all knowledge-we may
22  II,  26|     proportion established in bodies remains unaffected and secure,
23  II,  26|     may have been enclosed in bodies. Moreover, the same reasoning
24  II,  28|   been arranged in these very bodies, and know that they are
25  II,  28|     the hindrance which their bodies afford them? For of this
26  II,  37|       live enclosed in gloomy bodies amid phlegm and blood, among
27  II,  39|      they might find in their bodies causes by which to become
28  II,  40|     throw themselves on human bodies; and when set free, to be
29  II,  41|       cosmetics to deck their bodies, darken their eyes with
30  II,  42|       should prostitute their bodies for hire, should abandon
31  II,  45|      have bid them enter into bodies, imprisoned in which, they
32  II,  48|    are men but souls bound to bodies?-themselves show by perversely
33  II,  53|       of us when we leave our bodies, and from the jaws of hell,
34  II,  57|  survive, but perish with the bodies themselves: the opinion
35  II,  59|      the inner parts of men's bodies been formed and built up
36  II,  63|     souls were first bound to bodies; who contrived that binding,
37  II,  75|  heroes with immense and huge bodies? Do you not read that infants
38  II,  77|   pieces and rend asunder our bodies, do not rob us of life,
39 III,   8|       divine is embodied; for bodies must needs be distinguished
40 III,   8|      intercourse and union of bodies, that which is fleeting
41 III,   9|      without a purpose in the bodies of the gods, which has been
42 III,  10|     with shattered and ruined bodies, are enfeebled by their
43 III,  10|      gods and goddesses, with bodies uncovered and bare, the
44 III,  13|       enclose them in earthly bodies. What shall we say then?
45 III,  13| elbows; feet to support their bodies, regulate their steps, and
46 III,  14|     14. Are, then, the divine bodies free from these deformities?
47 III,  14|   hollowness of their swollen bodies? Further, if this is the
48 III,  15|    hairs and down grow on the bodies of the gods? that among
49 III,  16|      the fashion of their own bodies? How would they, I repeat,
50 III,  26|  heaps up the field with dead bodies; makes the streams flow
51  IV,  23|    there, I ask you, in human bodies, which could move, which
52  IV,  33|    pleasures by which earthly bodies are supported, and which
53   V,  31|   gods loved frail and mortal bodies? was it not you? Who that
54  VI,  10|       of a man, and of mortal bodies. The moon is always in motion,
55  VI,  12|     scope in representing the bodies of the gods, and giving
56  VI,  15|   there, then, that all these bodies should want the power of
57  VI,  15|      add any newness to these bodies, so that from this addition
58  VI,  16|    make up the whole of their bodies! You would at once see that
59  VI,  16|     the construction of their bodies, being in one part made
60  VI,  26|  filled with fruit, the naked bodies of women, and huge veretra
61 VII,   4|    must partake also of those bodies through which there is a
62 VII,  28|     exhalations deadly to the bodies of others? But the cause
63 VII,  29|     on the altars. For do the bodies of the deities feel parching
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