Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  45|  rigidity acquired even at birth; that the paralytic rose
 2  II,  11|    to men blind from their birth; to call the dead back to
 3  II,  35|   origin, and beginning of birth and life; but that which
 4  II,  52| have a cause and origin of birth in the elements themselves,
 5  II,  52|    that the cause of their birth does not go back to the
 6  II,  76|    of their rights of free birth? But, my opponent says,
 7 III,  10|    long delay, bringing to birth, and seeking the midwife'
 8  IV,   3|    goddess long before the birth of Romulus and his brother,
 9  IV,  19|   the gods should not know birth; or if they are born at
10  IV,  20| are, associate with them a birth, and impute to them a descent,
11  IV,  21|   to the light by modes of birth such as these, by which
12  IV,  27|   heavenly, but of earthly birth.
13   V,   5| equally well informed, the birth of the Great Mother of the
14   V,   8|  cause or beginning of her birth, had not violent storms
15   V,  10|     since you say that the birth occurred after ten months,
16   V,  12|    may have been of divine birth, or one of us, if you think
17  VI,  22| that a young man, of noble birth,-but he conceals his name,-
18 VII,  35|   they have a beginning in birth, it belongs to the supreme
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