Book
1 2 | sordid, and perishable, and~dead they are- all this it is
2 4 | fighting, have~been stretched dead, reduced to ashes; and be
3 4 | both thou and he will be dead; and~soon not even your
4 4 | say not what is it to~the dead, but what is it to the living?
5 4 | dissolution make room for other dead bodies; so the souls~which
6 4 | how many physicians are dead after often~contracting
7 4 | many cities are entirely~dead, so to speak, Helice and
8 4 | another has been laid out dead,~and another buries him:
9 6 | impression, that this is the dead body of a fish, and this
10 6 | a fish, and this is the dead~body of a bird or of a pig;
11 6 | pursuits~and of all nations are dead, so that thy thoughts come
12 7 | can our principles become dead, unless the impressions~(
13 7 | of others have~long been dead.~ Be not ashamed to be helped;
14 7 | Consider thyself to be dead, and to have completed thy
15 8 | A little time and I am dead, and all is~gone. What more
16 8 | like them.~All ephemeral, dead long ago. Some indeed have
17 8 | priests- the whole court is dead. Then turn to the rest,~
18 8 | did sit there, would the dead be conscious of it?~And
19 8 | conscious of it?~And if the dead were conscious, would they
20 8 | those do after these were~dead? All this is foul smell
21 9 | poor spirits~carrying about dead bodies, such is everything;
22 9 | representation of the mansions of the dead strikes~our eyes more clearly.~
23 9 | ruling faculty, Art thou dead, art thou~corrupted, art
24 10| the body only which is a dead thing; or, except through
25 11| time we are all laid out dead.~ Seventh, that it is not
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