Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  12|        to believe that anything belongs to you; since those things
 2  II,  76|         aid decreed us for what belongs to the husk of this flesh,-
 3 III,   3| sovereigns, but whatever honour belongs to them is found to be tacitly
 4 III,  20|     their aid is asked, in what belongs to another? This one is
 5 III,  24|     poor and the rich? For this belongs to the true and mighty God,
 6  IV,  16|  yourself another name for this belongs to me, whom the Nile, greatest
 7  IV,  16|     rest, by giving to one what belongs to all, or be charged with
 8  IV,  19|         something is said which belongs to man, and relates to the
 9  IV,  28|         a superior nature which belongs to a fleeting race, and
10  VI,   2|      impartially to all. For it belongs to a mortal race and human
11  VI,   4|    regions. For this it is that belongs specially to the gods,-to
12 VII,   6|       greatness of spirit which belongs to the deities is disturbed
13 VII,   8|       price or reward. For this belongs specially to deities, to
14 VII,  15|         not given; but-and this belongs to the divine-that by their
15 VII,  21|      back from the victim which belongs to that, that the other
16 VII,  21|         his own the blood which belongs to another? Or, as envious
17 VII,  35|        a beginning in birth, it belongs to the supreme God to know
18 VII,  35|       wide of the mark, as form belongs to a mortal body; and if
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