Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|  has the moderate warmth of spring and autumn, been modified
 2   I,  28| other, that they derive the spring of their existence from
 3  II,  10|     Did Pythagoras see them spring from number? Did Plato see
 4  II,  21|    pure cold water from the spring, and that if possible raised
 5  II,  39| buried in the germs of men, spring from the womb, burst into
 6 III,   3|  they are a royal race, and spring from the Supreme Ruler,
 7 III,  37|     the truth, and does not spring from the real state of the
 8  IV,   8|  only after things began to spring up, and be on the earth,
 9   V,   6|   strongest wine he drugs a spring much resorted to by Acdestis
10   V,  12|     pomegranate tree, also, spring from the blood which flowed
11   V,  12|     ground with a root, and spring up into a mighty tree, put
12   V,  12| taste of wine, because they spring from the blood of one filled
13  VI,  24| deeds, till now unheard of, spring to light in myriads from
14 VII,  21|     have its own cause, and spring, be derived from certain
15 VII,  44| worms are wont to do, which spring from mud; he rubs the ground
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