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 1      VI|       you. There are bounds of nature which prescribe and circumscribe
 2      VI|      by the rule and decree of nature. So it is that the fish
 3      VI|       is unable in defiance of nature to change on to dry land
 4      VI|    renouncing the privilege of nature, -- for this too is determined
 5      VI|     reason to prevent a divine nature, being beneficent and inclined
 6      VI|      of which will benefit our nature, he will, they being able
 7      VI|        the divine and inspired nature than creations of artists
 8      VI|      To this extent then human nature can participate in the super-human;
 9     VII|       as one superhuman in his nature, I would ask you to keep
10     VII| attribute to this man a mortal nature, take care lest by endowing
11    VIII|       of his being of a divine nature these very words to Damis
12    VIII|    time clearly understood the nature of Apollonius, that it was
13      IX|       and declare that, not by nature, but by dint of close study
14      XI|        then he was of a divine nature, it follows that the story
15     XII|      was a being of superhuman nature, and then to contradict
16   XXIII|      diviner than merely human nature, then he ought long before,
17   XXIII|          For we learn that the nature of the plague was a living
18    XXXV|        he truly understood the nature of Apollonius, to wit that
19     XLI|        for concluding that the nature, which is ever in movement,
20     XLI|        hither and thither. The nature which ever moves itself
21     XLI|     yourself being of a divine nature should transcend the glory
22    XLII|       things, and the peculiar nature of man's soul renders him
23    XLII|        him through the laws of nature, and the tenets of philosophy,
24    XLII|   wholly foreign to the proper nature of a reasonable living creature.
25    XLII|      in direct accordance with nature, it is at the same time
26    XLII|        not call anyone else by nature good or evil, but admit
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