Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  12|      your own master, even when yon are the property of another,
 2   I,  29|      torpor of inactivity? When yon believe that the sun is
 3   I,  30|         rain? Does Mercury send yon water from heaven? Has Aesculapius,
 4   I,  59|     masculines, and those which yon call neuter both in this
 5   I,  64|      bitter reproaches. Nay, if yon were kind and gentle in
 6  II,  73|      one, therefore, should ask yon why you have so lately begun
 7 III,  12|  appearance and shapes by which yon believe that the gods above
 8 III,  16|         dishonour those to whom yon ascribe that which you confess
 9  IV,  13|      comes in place of all whom yon invoke, and substituting
10  IV,  30|        be understood that it is yon who rouse the gods to fierce
11  IV,  32|    grant that the poets are, as yon say, the inventors and authors
12  VI,  11| recesses of your mind, in which yon revolve various and enter
13  VI,  16|         In this case, I say, do yon not see that newts, shrews,
14 VII,  15|         We reply, one such that yon believe that they neither
15 VII,  16|          to whose temples, when yon arrange to go, you come
16 VII,  20|         feeding-grounds? But if yon think that those things
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