Book
1 5 | which is under or upon the earth is not enough to give in
2 5 | city; and seeing that the earth is their parent, let them
3 5 | In the first place, the earth as he is informed is sacred
4 5 | of the food given by the earth, which not only affects
5 6 | allowed to sleep in the earth, and that we should not
6 6 | steel and iron, and not of earth; besides, how ridiculous
7 8 | a natural dryness of the earth, which keeps in the rain
8 8 | rest of the fruits of the earth shall be added, as well
9 8 | Athenian. I mean that the earth of necessity produces and
10 8 | to be sustained from the earth, taking the whole number
11 10| In the first place, the earth and the sun, and the stars
12 10| the sun, moon, stars, and earth, claiming for them a divine
13 10| should say that they are earth and stones only, which can
14 10| that fire and water, and earth and air, all exist by nature
15 10| which come next in order—earth, and sun, and moon, and
16 10| conceive fire and water and earth and air to be the first
17 10| all things in heaven, and earth, and sea by her movements,
18 10| which controls heaven and earth, and the whole world?—that
19 10| change move less and on the earth’s surface, but those which
20 10| creep into the depths of the earth, or I am high and will fly
21 10| among mankind. But upon this earth we know that there dwell
22 11| deposit entrusted to the earth, for I should not gain so
23 12| with a circular mound of earth and plant a grove of trees
24 12| the sustenance which the earth, their foster–parent, is
25 12| thinks he is laying in the earth, has gone away to complete
26 12| to be full of stones, and earth, and many other lifeless
|