Book, Paragraph

 1  II,   2|         Apollo, Diana, Mercury, Mars, Give a true judgment; and,
 2 III,  26|          We shall bring forward Mars himself, and the fair mother
 3 III,  26|   desire. My opponent says that Mars has power over wars; whether
 4  IV,  25|        Was it not you? Who that Mars was Spartanus? was it not
 5  IV,  25|     your poets, who re resented Mars and Venus as wounded by
 6  IV,  27|     afterwards Vulcan, Phaeton, Mars; Venus herself, the mother
 7  IV,  35|       the mother of the race of Mars, and parent of the imperial
 8   V,  41|         changed. In speaking of Mars and Venus as having been
 9   V,  41|     signified by the binding of Mars and Venus, two most inconsistent
10   V,  43|        the adulterous Venus and Mars.
11   V,  45|    Common conversation you name Mars when you mean fighting,
12  VI,   3| opponent says, is the temple of Mars, this that of Juno and of
13  VI,   3|        say this is the house of Mars, this of Juno and Venus,
14  VI,  11|       Romans a spear instead of Mars, as the muses of Varro point
15  VI,  12|        them upon the temples of Mars. and to strip Mars of his
16  VI,  12|   temples of Mars. and to strip Mars of his arms, and, on the
17  VI,  12|      can be also supposed to be Mars, and he who had been Mayors
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