Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  30|        you till? whose is that air which you inhale, and return
 2  II,  16|       sinews. They inspire the air through nostrils, and in
 3  II,  16|        like manner drew in the air, and breathed it out with
 4  II,  30|      sent whirling through the air, can in any wise do harm?
 5  II,  49| element, not particles fine as air; nor does the sea become
 6  II,  52|  others add to these breath of air, but that some say that
 7  II,  59|      hail whirling through the air, which makes the rain fall
 8 III,  13|        fluids and a current of air might easily pass; teeth
 9 III,  30|        gods? For if she is the air, as you have been wont to
10 III,  41|      that they are gods of the air, and are termed heroes;
11  VI,   2|     diseases by corrupting the air, should not burn up the
12  VI,  10|       winds are only a flow of air driven and impelled in mundane
13 VII,  28|        and respire currents of air so that the qualities of
14 VII,  28|       and draws in draughts of air, to be sent back in the
15 VII,  28|   inhale odours enwrapt in the air that accompanies them, it
16 VII,  42|    pleasure afresh, turned the air men breathed into a baneful
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