Book, Paragraph

1   I,  40|    power. Did his doctrines lose their peculiar influence,
2  II,  16|     and hunger, and at last lose their strength by reason
3  II,  27|       27. So then, if souls lose all their knowledge on being
4  II,  40|      should be compelled to lose the hope with which they
5  II,  45|     limp in walking, others lose their sight, others be stiff
6   V,  40| mute and speechless, and to lose that flow of words and noisy
7  VI,  16|     of rain, at other times lose the firm union of their
8  VI,  16| with continued neglect they lose their position and appearance,
9 VII,  20|    and ashes, that this may lose its purple hue, that the
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