Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  49|       violence and the ills of fortune. For this is the mark of
 2  II,  45|     the storms and tempests of fortune every day, and now do mean
 3  II,  45|         envy the joys and good fortune of others; and further,
 4  II,  65|      thing, Juno another, that Fortune, Mercury, Vulcan, are each
 5  II,  76|     lightly all the threats of fortune, whatever they be; and if
 6 III,  40| teaching, thinks that they are Fortune, and Ceres, the genius Jovialis,
 7 III,  43|    from them, if Ceres, Pales, Fortune, or the genius Jovialis,
 8  IV,   2|        the observant, the good fortune, indeed, of him who lives
 9  VI,  23|    protected by no indwellers, Fortune has power over them, and
10  VI,  25|        his workman s dress; or Fortune, with her horn full of apples,
11 VII,  12|       rich, the other of small fortune, but worthy of praise for
12 VII,  13|      so as either to give good fortune, or to drive away and avert
13 VII,  23|     that the gods promote good fortune and calamity, not even in
14 VII,  50|      alternating fickleness of fortune. But if the state of affairs
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