Book, Paragraph

 1 III,  15|      of a frail and perishing animal? to furnish them with those
 2 III,  35|   covered, and upheld, is one animal possessed of wisdom and
 3 III,  35|      if the world is a single animal, and moves from the impulse
 4  IV,  16|       herself; what drawn-out animal shall we place among them,
 5   V,   3|      sow, an ox, or any other animal. Now, as he had not yet
 6 VII,   9|        So, if some ox, or any animal you please, which is slain
 7 VII,  18|   there with the life of what animal this debt is paid, their
 8 VII,  21|     offered to the deity what animal it is with whose head the
 9 VII,  45| presence, but, just as a dull animal of earth, he seeks a conveyance
10 VII,  45|    the likeness of a terrible animal, and afford room for objections,
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