Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  13|       falsehoods? It is almost three hundred years -something
 2   I,  46|       from the tomb, and after three days to be loosed from the
 3  II,  24|         or finally, of four to three; but ask him that with which
 4  II,  24|        twice two are, or twice three. We wish to see, we wish
 5  II,  49|     evenly balanced. One, two, three, four, ten, twenty, a hundred,
 6  II,  56|       must. And while of these three opinions one only must be
 7  II,  71|  Jupiter and Picus to Latinus? Three, as the line of succession
 8  II,  71|        clear. There are, then, three hundred and sixty years
 9 III,  13|    teeth to masticate food, of three kinds, and adapted to three
10 III,  13|    three kinds, and adapted to three services; hands to do their
11 III,  32|        on your interpretation, three deities have no existence:
12 III,  33|        again, you do away with three deities; if indeed the first
13 III,  33|        in number by the use of three names, is not the number
14 III,  34|         and that there are not three distinct persons, as there
15 III,  34| distinct persons, as there are three different names; that in
16 III,  37|       then, says that they are three in number; Mnaseas, whom
17 III,  38|       have no existence to the three who alone really are; so
18  IV,  14|      in the universe there are three Joves, one of whom has Aether
19  IV,  15|     there are four Vulcans and three Dianas, as many Aesculapii
20  IV,  15|      the same number of Muses, three winged Cupids, and four
21  IV,  17|     there are four Apollos, or three Jupiters, not even if you
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