Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  38|     discovered the use of herbs; Minerva, because she produced the
 2  II,  70|          say, in like manner, of Minerva. For if, as you assert,
 3  II,  70|         it is quite certain that Minerva did not exist, and was not
 4 III,   6|        opponent says, and Janus, Minerva, Juno, Apollo, Venus, Triptolemus,
 5 III,  31|         plausible arguments that Minerva is the moon, and proves
 6 III,  31|    memory, whence her name even, Minerva, has arisen, as if she were
 7 III,  40|          that Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva were the dii Penates, without
 8  IV,  16|          fear of you, to worship Minerva, for example, with the rights
 9  IV,  16|      will perhaps say: "The name Minerva is mine, mine the divine
10  IV,  16|       number of the gods." "Nay, Minerva," the fifth will say, "are
11  IV,  16|  rightfully yours. For that I am Minerva, begotten of father Pallas,
12  IV,  16|           then, bear the name of Minerva, an impudent parricide,
13  IV,  16|         cease to say that she is Minerva, who is named Coryphasia,
14  IV,  25|           but with his uncle; as Minerva, who gives light, and trims
15  IV,  29|         Jupiter, and the wars of Minerva and the virgin Diana; by
16   V,  26| Erectheus? what, you citizens of Minerva? The mind is eager to know
17   V,  45|       Ceres when you mean bread, Minerva when you mean weaving, Venus
18  VI,   6|          buried in the temple of Minerva, at Athens; again, in the
19 VII,  22|  pregnant sow; but to the virgin Minerva is slain a virgin calf,
20 VII,  22|       pure and virgin heifers to Minerva because she is pure, of
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