Book
1 4 | from time so remote? For as here the mutation of~these bodies
2 4 | the other without a~book: here is another half naked: Bread
3 5 | is in~thy power to live here. But if men do not permit
4 5 | which still detains thee here? If the objects of~sense
5 6 | word profitable be taken here in the common sense as said
6 6 | altogether unknown? One thing here is worth a great deal, to~
7 7 | What~then art thou doing here, O imagination? Go away,
8 8 | the universe. If it stays here,~it also changes here, and
9 8 | stays here,~it also changes here, and is dissolved into its
10 8 | the~world; and not even here do all agree, no, not any
11 8 | must be the last. Again here consider the death of a
12 8 | hast cut thyself off- yet here there~is this beautiful
13 9 | with all the fire which is here, that even every substance
14 10| men and leave~everything here, he gives himself up entirely
15 10| whether a man lives there or~here, if he lives everywhere
16 10| produced"?~ Either thou livest here and hast already accustomed
17 10| other; and that all things here are the same with things
18 10| man cling to a longer stay~here? Do not however for this
19 11| universe they are overpowered here in the~compound mass (the
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