Book, Paragraph

1  II,  40|     creatures are fed by what springs up spontaneously, and is
2  II,  55|       able to say whence evil springs, or our power fails us,
3 III,   9|    and that, as each new race springs up, a substitution, regularly
4  IV,   9| getting of it, seeing that it springs very often from the basest
5   V,   6|      from them there suddenly springs up, covered with fruit,
6   V,   7|    the blood which had flowed springs a flower, the violet, and
7   V,   7|  sheds tears also, from which springs an almond tree, signifying
8 VII,  28| influences of the things, but springs from the nature of his own
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