Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   9|       events which are brought to pass, and which happen under
 2   I,  59|       that, for one gender cannot pass into the other, he commits
 3  II,   7|   possessed of knowledge? For, to pass by divine things, and those
 4  II,   8|          believing that they will pass safely through the different
 5  II,  14|            and being annihilated, pass away vainly in everlasting
 6  II,  16|       leaving their human bodies, pass into cattle and other creatures,
 7  II,  27|      without change in themselves pass into a different state.
 8  II,  31|          he shall do no evil, and pass his life in obedience to
 9  II,  33|        think that, as soon as you pass away, freed from the bonds
10  II,  66|  inherited from your fathers, and pass over to barbarous and foreign
11  II,  67|         to change an opinion, and pass from ancient customs to
12  II,  69|           begin at some time, and pass into general use and practice
13 III,  13|       current of air might easily pass; teeth to masticate food,
14 III,  20|        foretell what will come to pass, owing to their want of
15 III,  21|      future; and do they live and pass the time according to the
16 III,  26|            Furiae thieves, and we pass by in utter silence the
17 III,  33|          one consenting voice. We pass by Venus, named because
18  IV,  12|        happen, may it not come to pass, although you craftily conceal
19  IV,  26|           a bird, a bull; and, to pass beyond all limits of disgrace,
20  IV,  28|        are, in your gods; and you pass by no form of vice, wickedness,
21   V,   2|           last, or what it should pass by silently, it is not easy
22   V,   2|         they are true-rather than pass current as true, and suggest
23   V,   2|       altogether in vain, and may pass away idly through the force
24   V,  18|           very exposition. Let us pass by Fauna Fatua, therefore,
25   V,  18|          his Causalia. But let us pass by with similar neglect
26   V,  19|                      19. We shall pass by the wild Bacchanalia
27   V,  19|     mysteries of Cyprian Venus we pass by also, whose founder is
28   V,  20|            would not suffer us to pass cursorily by the wrongs
29   V,  38|         taken place; nor can that pass over into a substance foreign
30   V,  42|     Whether was this name made to pass from the sun to a man, or
31 VII,   8|          mention, but allow it to pass away in silence. This one
32 VII,  41| nevertheless rejoiced to see them pass each other, and be passed,
33 VII,  45|        his place, and prepares to pass from one region to another,
34 App     |         rejoice that some of them pass the rest, that others are
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