Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  45|      who a little before were borne on the shoulders of others;
 2   I,  62|     His own-of that which was borne, not of the bearer; and
 3  II,  12|      by them in their terror, borne down headlong by his own
 4  II,  21|   substantial food, let it be borne in by the same nurse, still
 5 III,   4|      you have at no time been borne aloft to the stars of heaven,
 6  IV,   7|   that your matrons should be borne? But if facts themselves
 7   V,   7|       Attis snatches the pipe borne by him who was goading them
 8   V,  29|       distinction, being both borne on headlong by his innate
 9   V,  37|  sprung forth from the earth, borne along in a four-horse chariot:
10 VII,  45| conveyance on which he may be borne; he avoids the waves of
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