Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  26|     learned when it enters its earthly body. For unless it were
 2  II,  28|         on being enwrapt in an earthly body, has no recollection
 3  II,  37|       and be the tenants of an earthly body for no purpose? They
 4  II,  39|      contact with the body and earthly limits, should be buried
 5  II,  56|        and guide the course of earthly events.
 6  II,  57|     and survive the end of our earthly life; that one believes
 7 III,  13|        decency enclose them in earthly bodies. What shall we say
 8 III,  15|    these the countenance of an earthly creature, to blame others
 9  IV,  19| relates to the meanness of our earthly race? Or, while you think
10  IV,  21|        of this unclean herd of earthly beasts is conceived and
11  IV,  27|        not of heavenly, but of earthly birth.
12  IV,  28|       for they are a human and earthly race to whom they apply;
13  IV,  33|    gods the pleasures by which earthly bodies are supported, and
14  VI,  17|        back and avoid entering earthly habitations; nay, more,
15 VII,   2|   without, and not drawing any earthly pleasures from the resources
16 VII,  46|        say than that it was of earthly origin, although of immense
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