Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  59|        other growths useless for food, which on the one hand cannot
 2  II,  16| necessity to be on the watch for food. What else is our aim in
 3  II,  21|       and brought up on suitable food. Let us therefore provide
 4  II,  21|    supported by more substantial food, let it be borne in by the
 5  II,  21|        unbroken silence. Let the food, too, which is carried in
 6  II,  59|     among the different kinds of food, it is not alight or easy
 7 III,  13|         pass; teeth to masticate food, of three kinds, and adapted
 8 III,  14|        since they do not eat the food of men, are we to believe
 9 III,  32|  provides all things living with food; others declare that the
10   V,   6|      gods with apples, and other food, and brings forth a child,
11   V,  10|          at that time? with what food, with what juices, was he
12   V,  27|       victuals and the taking of food, is use made not of reason,
13  VI,  20|        capitols? Why do you give food and nourishment to geese?
14 VII,   3|  nourishment, and that it is the food given to them which causes
15 VII,   4|         trained to take these as food, are sometimes moved with
16 VII,   6|          it is customary to toss food, upon which they may rage
17 VII,  16|        deigned to give to us for food. But the same gods have
18 VII,  16|      used by you as part of your food; why, then, do you not put
19 VII,  17|         the gods by new kinds of food? do you honour them with
20 VII,  21|          for eating, rejected as food by others?
21 VII,  24|    accustomed to send down their food and bring it back again;
22 VII,  29|    manner, also, after the solid food of cakes and pottages, and
23 VII,  29|         cups of wine, that their food may be more easily softened,
24 VII,  29|       luxurious feasts, and rich food,-lest some piece of flesh
25 VII,  32|          with eager cravings for food by fasting, and hungry after
26 VII,  42|      children, yet dependent for food on their nurses,-what had
27 VII,  45|          as we read that he used food also, by which bodily existence
28 VII,  45|        that he may gulp down the food sought for with gaping mouth;
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