Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   8|      been diffused through the four elements of the universe,
 2  II,  24|       to eight, or finally, of four to three; but ask him that
 3  II,  49|     balanced. One, two, three, four, ten, twenty, a hundred,
 4  II,  56|      same world is composed of four elements, others of two,
 5  II,  71|     what you began to worship. Four hundred years ago, my opponent
 6  II,  71|       did kings reign in Alba? Four hundred and twenty almost.
 7 III,  37|       mentioned, that they are four; Myrtilus brings forward
 8 III,  40| teaching, shows that there are four kinds of Penates; and that
 9  IV,  15| theologians say that there are four Vulcans and three Dianas,
10  IV,  15|      Dionysi, six Hercules and four Venuses, threesets of Castors
11  IV,  15|       three winged Cupids, and four named Apollo; whose fathers
12  IV,  17|      us believe that there are four Apollos, or three Jupiters,
13   V,   8| ancient times, in the first of four books which he has left
14   V,  37|       as simple, for a team of four horses, a chariot, and Summanus
15  VI,   5|    mountains, forests, and the four quarters of the world. If
16 VII,  24|       which are made by mixing four kinds of fruit. In like
17 VII,  26|  offering sacrifice during the four hundred years in which Alba
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