Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|         are clothed, and by whose heat all things are vivified,
 2   I,   2|           cold of winter, has the heat of summer, has the moderate
 3   I,   9|      scorch itself in the burning heat, and to devise excuses for
 4   I,  20|        their offended dignity. By heat, by hurtful cold, by noxious
 5   I,  53|        blaze was checked, and his heat became moderate; for what
 6  II,  17|      avoid the cold of winter and heat of summer? What! do not
 7  II,  20|      neither cold nor the violent heat of summer. To this let there
 8  II,  32| inconvenienced by cold or intense heat, we provide with anxious
 9 III,  15|        and shield themselves from heat and cold? But if any one
10  IV,   6|       with what kinds of wood the heat in their fires is produced;
11  IV,  26|        the sea is asserted in the heat of maddened passion to have
12   V,   6|          been wont to assuage the heat and burning thirst roused
13   V,  44| wrigglings into which the lustful heat of Semele's offspring forced
14 VII,  23|        dryness into moisture, the heat of fire into cold, or what
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