Book
1 3 | continued by a~succession of poor human beings, who will very
2 4 | the understanding; he is poor, who has need of~another,
3 4 | my reason.~ Love the art, poor as it may be, which thou
4 4 | which is~nearest to it, the poor body, is burnt, filled with
5 5 | and to find fault with thy poor body, and to try to please~
6 5 | false impressions; and the poor~soul itself is an exhalation
7 5 | beyond the limits of the poor flesh~and breath, to remember
8 8 | either be dissolved, or~thy poor breath must be extinguished,
9 8 | just as~indifferent as his poor breath and flesh. For though
10 9 | children and their sports, and poor spirits~carrying about dead
11 9 | injurious, approach their poor souls, penetrate within,
12 9 | worthless are all these poor~people who are engaged in
13 9 | Imagine that thou seest their poor souls laid bare. When~they
14 9 | movements as go on in the poor flesh, shall be~free from
15 10| the flesh, and above that poor~thing called fame, and death,
16 10| another when he~has caught a poor hare, and another when he
17 10| into and mixed with the poor flesh so as to move together~
18 10| dies a quiet death, the poor soul is easily separated~
19 12| yet the sensations of the poor flesh which has grown about
20 12| For~he who regards not the poor flesh which envelops him,
21 12| away, let it carry away the poor flesh,~the poor breath,
22 12| away the poor flesh,~the poor breath, everything else;
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