Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  40|          forum with suits for one tree, for one furrow; should
 2   V,   6|         with fruit, a pomegranate tree, seeing the beauty of which,
 3   V,   7|         at last, and under a pine tree mutilates himself, saying, "
 4   V,   7|         violet, and with this the tree is girt. Thence the custom
 5   V,   7|           which springs an almond tree, signifying the bitterness
 6   V,   7|         away to her cave the pine tree, beneath which Attis had
 7   V,   7|     pacing round the trunk of the tree now at rest. Jupiter is
 8   V,  12|         say so. Did a pomegranate tree, also, spring from the blood
 9   V,  12|           spring up into a mighty tree, put forth branches loaded
10   V,  16|          not in imitation of that tree, beneath which the raging
11   V,  16|         surround the trunk of the tree? Is it not to recall the
12   V,  16|          mean the branches of the tree girt round and decked with
13   V,  39|          not in imitation of that tree beneath which Attis mutilated
14  VI,  14|           clay, wood taken from a tree, or glue mixed with gypsum.
15 VII,  27|        produced from the gum of a tree? For, lest you should happen
16 VII,  27| indiscriminately the juice of any tree whatever, without making
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