Book, Paragraph

1   I,   5|        is called the Atlantis of Neptune, as Plato tells us, and
2  II,  65|       crops, Aesculapius health, Neptune one thing, Juno another,
3 III,  31|  different branches of learning. Neptune, they say, has received
4 III,  31| outspread water, there is no god Neptune at all; and thus is put
5 III,  40|        that the dii Penates were Neptune and Apollo, who once, on
6 III,  40|  pertains to Jupiter, another to Neptune, the third to the shades
7 III,  43|         thou Apollo, and thou, O Neptune, and in your divine clemency
8 III,  43|         the genius Jovialis, not Neptune and Apollo, shall be the
9   V,  45|          when you mean fighting, Neptune when you mean the seas,
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