Book
1 2 | into the things beneath the earth, as the poet says,~and seeks
2 3 | and deity; the other is earth and corruption.~ Do not
3 3 | and small the nook of the earth where he lives; and short
4 4 | quiet at last. For the whole earth is a point,~and how small
5 4 | given to me from certain earth,~and that which is watery
6 4 | eternity?- But how does the earth contain the bodies of those
7 4 | them! And~nevertheless this earth receives them by reason
8 4 | which are~cast into the earth or into a womb: but this
9 4 | Heraclitus, that the death of earth is~to become water, and
10 5 | in, and falling upon that earth out of~which my father collected
11 5 | Olympus from the wide-spread earth.~ ~What then is there which
12 6 | how I shall at last become earth? And why am I~disturbed,
13 6 | of the Fruit-bearer (the earth)? And how is it with respect~
14 7 | which has grown from the earth to the earth,~ But that
15 7 | grown from the earth to the earth,~ But that which has sprung
16 8 | with himself:~and the whole earth too is a point.~ Attend
17 9 | distributed: just~as there is one earth of all things which are
18 9 | earthy turns towards the earth, everything which~is liquid
19 9 | governed by it.~ Soon will the earth cover us all: then the earth,
20 9 | earth cover us all: then the earth, too, will~change, and the
21 9 | the~callosities of the earth; and gold and silver, the
22 10| nature~brings it.~ "The earth loves the shower"; and "
23 12| suddenly be raised up above the earth, and shouldst look down~
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