Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2| recurrence of fresh ones? Has the cold of winter, has the heat
 2   I,  11|      adverse? What, then, because cold is disagreeable to your
 3   I,  20|      dignity. By heat, by hurtful cold, by noxious winds, by the
 4   I,  52|           and life to bodies long cold in death. Or if that is
 5  II,  17|         by which we can avoid the cold of winter and heat of summer?
 6  II,  20|          by a roof and walls, not cold in winter, not too warm
 7  II,  20|    equable that we suffer neither cold nor the violent heat of
 8  II,  21|       quench his thirst than pure cold water from the spring, and
 9  II,  32|          not be inconvenienced by cold or intense heat, we provide
10  II,  59|           sweet, others bitter or cold? From what kind of material
11 III,  14|        half-naked, bare; or, that cold may not annoy them, covered
12 III,  15|          themselves from heat and cold? But if any one believes
13 III,  32|         the caduceus, born on the cold mountain top, contriver
14   V,  16|        limbs fast stiffening with cold? What mean the branches
15  VI,   3|           built? Do they feel the cold of winter, or are they scorched
16  VI,  21|      which he was taking away was cold in the frosts of winter,
17 VII,  23|   moisture, the heat of fire into cold, or what is contrary to
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License