Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  36|       her secret charms? Is it Ceres, born in Sicilian territory,
 2   I,  38|    discovered the use of wine; Ceres, because she discovered
 3  II,  65|  sickness; if you believe that Ceres can give good crops, Aesculapius
 4  II,  73|     the sacred rites of mother Ceres, which were adopted but
 5 III,  10|        bare, the full-breasted Ceres nursing Iacchus, as the
 6 III,  32| declare that the same earth is Ceres, because it brings forth
 7 III,  32|     have no existence: neither Ceres nor Vesta are to be reckoned
 8 III,  34|      them-maintain that Diana, Ceres, Luna, are but one deity
 9 III,  34|     show it to be so, again is Ceres but an empty name, and Diana:
10 III,  40|     that they are Fortune, and Ceres, the genius Jovialis, and
11 III,  43|     receive help from them, if Ceres, Pales, Fortune, or the
12  IV,  27|      after Adonis; her mother, Ceres, after some rustic Jasion,
13   V,  16|     the goddess abstained from Ceres' fruit in her vehement sorrow?
14   V,  20|       burning after his mother Ceres with evil passions and forbidden
15   V,  22|       it is said, lusted after Ceres. Why, I ask, has Jupiter
16   V,  24|  bowels of the earth. Now when Ceres did not know what had happened,
17   V,  25|   Eleusis, receives hospitably Ceres, worn out with ills of many
18   V,  25|       to despise her humanity; Ceres remains utterly immoveable,
19   V,  29|        the chaste pleasures of Ceres? Do you wish your young
20   V,  32|   Jupiter instead of rain, and Ceres instead of the earth. And
21   V,  34|       the union of Jupiter and Ceres; another may both devise
22   V,  35|      said instead of the rain, Ceres for the earth, and for Libera
23   V,  35|     for the wrath and anger of Ceres; what the word Brimo means;
24   V,  37|    intercourse with his mother Ceres: as was explained before,
25   V,  37|      dark and ambiguous terms. Ceres was enraged and angry, and
26   V,  37|        named for the rain, and Ceres, who was named for the earth,
27   V,  39|        that wandering in which Ceres, worn out in seeking for
28   V,  40|     intercourse of Jupiter and Ceres? and to signify the descent
29   V,  43|       the union of Jupiter and Ceres, the burying of the seed
30   V,  45|        when you mean the seas, Ceres when you mean bread, Minerva
31  VI,   6|        buried in the temple of Ceres at Eleusin? and in the shrine
32  VI,  25|   Aesculapius, with his staff; Ceres, with huge breasts, or the
33 VII,  32|     uses. The lectisternium of Ceres will be on the next Ides,
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