Book, Paragraph

 1  II,   2|    true judgment; and, looking round on all these things which
 2  II,  58|      but is ever being carried round in a circular motion? whether
 3  IV,   5|   after parts. For whatever is round, and bounded on every side
 4   V,   1|      sleepers, and cast chains round them, lying soaked with
 5   V,   7|      wounds her breast, pacing round the trunk of the tree now
 6   V,  11|      hold of the nooses placed round them might surround them
 7   V,  16|      branches of the tree girt round and decked with wreaths
 8   V,  21|        he winds his huge coils round the terrified maiden, and
 9   V,  35| allegory which has been thrown round them? For if the whole structure
10  VI,  10|      that the sun is perfectly round by our eyesight, which cannot
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