Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   4|           When was the world set on fire, and reduced to coals and
 2   I,  36|      territory, the other burned by fire on Mount Oeta? Is it the
 3  II,   9|           Does not he who says that fire or water is the origin of
 4  II,   9|           world with destruction by fire, and says that when the
 5  II,   9|             comes it will be set on fire, to Panaetius, Chrysippus,
 6  II,  14| long-protracted torment with raging fire, into which certain fiercely
 7  II,  20|          not by the introduction of fire, nor by the sight of the
 8  II,  23|            If you made a very great fire, or surrounded him with
 9  II,  30|           of Tartarus, or rivers of fire, or marshes with miry abysses,
10  II,  58|             that these particles of fire should be set all over the
11  II,  70|              and Vulcan the lord of fire, were begotten by father
12 III,  21|            that Vulcan, the lord of fire, may form for them swords,
13 III,  23|            off in murderous throes? Fire is under Vulcan's care,
14 III,  30|          mighty flames, and wasting fire which cannot be extinguished?
15 III,  33|          whom you all declare to be fire, with one consenting voice.
16  IV,  30|           incense to be burned with fire, not he must be thought
17  IV,  35|          and guard the ever-burning fire; the whole people and the
18   V,  35|      flowers of Henna are; what the fire taken from Aetna, and the
19  VI,  13|            the artists were full of fire; and they strove each to
20  VI,  23|            to avert that calamitous fire, and preserve from destruction
21  VI,  23|         queenly Juno when a violent fire destroyed her famous shrine,
22  VI,  23|           both plundered and set on fire, so that out of so many
23  VI,  23|      tempests-what have been set on fire by enemies, and by kings
24 VII,   3|            the altars, it is set on fire in like manner, and is destroyed,
25 VII,  15|         honour is it, having set on fire piles of wood, to hide the
26 VII,  17|             Finally, cease to place fire upon your altars, then indeed
27 VII,  23|          into moisture, the heat of fire into cold, or what is contrary
28 VII,  27|            caused by the odour of a fire, and produced from the gum
29 VII,  28|          even if you were to set on fire a thousand pounds of the
30 VII,  40|      mischances were portended from fire and slaughter, from the
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