Book, Paragraph

 1  II,   9|     write yourselves, which you read from time to time on subjects
 2  II,  75|      not hear your own writings read, telling that there were
 3  II,  75|         huge bodies? Do you not read that infants on their mothers'
 4 III,   7|      will not hear his opinions read, overthrowing their prejudices;
 5  IV,  19|      mortality itself, when you read and hear, That god was born
 6   V,  14|      the member? Pray, when you read such tales, do you not seem
 7   V,  15|        by you, and is willingly read over by you every day, and
 8   V,  23|      that this can be heard and read in this world, and that
 9  VI,  13|         Who does not know-if he read Posidippus over again-that
10 VII,  13|     still, write something, and read, to give honour to the gods,
11 VII,  39| capacity of our abilities, have read, and know, that it has been
12 VII,  45|                   45. And as we read that he used food also,
13 App     |         capacity of our powers, read these same things, and know
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