Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  41|        himself, who was torn in pieces by the hands of a hundred
 2   I,  64|     censure, brand, and tear in pieces your luxurious habits and
 3   I,  64|         alone you would tear in pieces, you would rend asunder,
 4   I,  64|          and break His bones in pieces, and devour Him like beasts
 5  II,   8|     with droll jests to pull to pieces our readiness of belief
 6  II,  12|       his fiery car, blown into pieces by the mouth of Peter, and
 7  II,  39|   address as superhuman deities pieces of wood, brass, and stones;
 8  II,  41|        men devoured and torn in pieces by wild beasts, and themselves
 9  II,  45|      that some might be torn in pieces by wild beasts, others perish
10  II,  45|          and tear each other to pieces with fiercely biting teeth.
11  II,  77|     prison, break its stones in pieces, and burn its roof, its
12  II,  77| monsters with which you tear in pieces and rend asunder our bodies,
13  IV,   6|        that they may not fly in pieces, overcome by the violence
14   V,  19|     majesty of the god, tear in pieces with gory mouths the flesh
15  VI,  16|    discretion, sink down before pieces of baked earthenware, adore
16  VI,  16|       scarcity, rags, down, and pieces of paper to make their nests
17  VI,  26| act-little sickles, keys, caps, pieces of wood, winged sandals,
18 VII,   1|       by savagely tearing us to pieces with wild beasts, on the
19 VII,  24|         fat cut into very small pieces, as dainties are; that which
20 VII,  24|  haunches of bulls, the roasted pieces of meat which are spitted,
21 VII,  50|     power of any deity dwelt in pieces of flint, within its mass,
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