Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   5|    utterly ruined and blotted out countless tribes? Did this form a
 2   I,  28|           remain the same through countless ages, though by nature they
 3   I,  46| manifested Himself in open day to countless numbers of men; who spoke
 4   I,  65|          should be free from such countless bodily distresses? And though
 5  II,   7|          C) why he undergoes such countless ills? whether the earth
 6  II,  55|          evil and the occasion of countless miseries. Whence then, you
 7 III,   9|         be full of gods, and that countless heavens could not contain
 8 III,   9|           ever begetting, and the countless multitude of their descendants,
 9  IV,   4|           blows were sustained in countless disastrous battles? Was
10  IV,   8|    precede all things whatever by countless ages and generations. But
11  IV,  26|         himself of having assumed countless forms, and concealed by
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