Book
1 1 | a reasonable care~of his body's health, not as one who
2 1 | been stupid nor deformed in body; that I did~not make more
3 1 | direct instructions; that my~body has held out so long in
4 2 | composition of the whole body subject~to putrefaction,
5 2 | everything which belongs to the body is a stream, and what belongs~
6 3 | the soul inclosed in the body, he cares not at all:~for
7 3 | another kind of vision.~ Body, soul, intelligence: to
8 3 | soul, intelligence: to the body belong sensations, to the
9 4 | nearest to it, the poor body, is burnt, filled with matter
10 4 | people and in what a~feeble body this interval is laboriously
11 5 | find fault with thy poor body, and to try to please~men,
12 5 | all bodies to be such a body as it is, so out of all
13 5 | that naturally exists in a body which~is all one, then thou
14 6 | impression, that this is the dead body of a fish, and this is the
15 6 | fish, and this is the dead~body of a bird or of a pig; and
16 6 | things which concern the body and things which~concern
17 6 | way in this life,~when thy body does not give way.~ Take
18 6 | I consist of a little body and a soul. Now to this
19 6 | soul. Now to this little body all~things are indifferent,
20 7 | into such ways. Let the body itself take care,~if it
21 7 | whole, as the parts of our body with one another.~How many
22 7 | to the persuasions of the body, for it is~the peculiar
23 7 | thou wilt ever dig.~ The body ought to be compact, and
24 7 | required also in the whole body. But all of these things~
25 7 | with the composition of~the body, as not to have allowed
26 8 | light also.~ Turn it (the body) inside out, and see what
27 8 | other things: the one~to the body which surrounds thee; the
28 8 | to the body- then let the body say what it~thinks of it-
29 8 | apart from the rest of the body, such does a man make~himself,
30 8 | it meets with any solid body~which stands in the way
31 8 | which receives~it. For a body will deprive itself of the
32 9 | come~together as in one body, and the part ought not
33 10| more manifest than the body which surrounds thee? Wilt
34 10| Such a man has put off the body, and as he sees that he~
35 10| obstacles either affect~the body only which is a dead thing;
36 10| easily separated~from the body, such also ought thy departure
37 10| this that~they grow to the body. For indeed there is no
38 11| must be~separated from the body, and ready either to be
39 11| the perishable part, the~body, and to its gross pleasures.~
40 11| in the~compound mass (the body). And also the whole of
41 12| thou art composed, a little body, a~little breath (life),
42 12| happen, and whatever in the~body which envelops thee or in
43 12| nature~associated with the body, is attached to thee independent
44 12| in what condition both in body and soul a man should be~
45 12| but that his child~and his body and his very soul came from
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