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 1       I|   Origen composed against the book which Celsus wrote and --
 2     III|   circulation, using both the book of Maximus and that of Damis
 3      XI|     and the allegation in the book that he was divine is devoid
 4    XIII|     have taken from the first book of Philostratus ; and let
 5      XV|      himself, tells us in his book. For how could he be astonished
 6     XVI|   incidents out of the second book, let us pass on to the third,
 7    XXII|      facts, further on in his book, as if by way of condemning
 8   XXIII|     is contained in the third book of Philostratus, and let
 9    XXVI|      miracles however in this book do not stand in need of
10    XXVI|     myriad other cases in the book in which his sooth-sayings
11   XXVII|    the contents of the fourth book, and in the fifth book of
12   XXVII| fourth book, and in the fifth book of his history, after a
13  XXVIII|      little lower down in the book he brings a flute-player
14     XXX|            XXX~ ~IN the sixth book our story-teller resumes
15   XXXII|       to consider the seventh book of his history.~ ~
16   XXXIX|           XXXIX~ ~IN the same book we are told that he had
17      XL|       at the beginning of the book of Philostratus, I mean
18      XL|   Philostratus follows in his book the accounts of earlier
19      XL|   less in the exordium of his book than throughout it, that
20    XLII|      which the author of this book has wheeled him in upon
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