Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  21|       the products of the earth retain their natural qualities;
 2   I,  29|      who hath authorized you to retain its produce and its possession?
 3   I,  38|         death; whether we shall retain our perceptions, or have
 4  II,  26|       material, as is asserted, retain their knowledge of the past,
 5  II,  26|       itself, so that it cannot retain its natural state, must
 6  II,  27| whatever it may be, must always retain its own nature, and that
 7  II,  51|        it; for if to know is to retain in the mind that which you
 8   V,   1|       of them you would neither retain in their constant use, nor
 9  VI,  14|        is going on, if only you retain your right, and are not
10  VI,  15|      previously, all these they retain when bulk up in the bodily
11 VII,  20|      things which are white and retain their brightness, you yourselves
12 VII,  23|        their own powers, and to retain their own characters. For
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