Part,  Paragraph

 1    II        |    also Fire is lighter than Water. But light and heavy things
 2    II,      1|  which Light exists, nor can Water, which is heavy, be in the
 3    II,      1| force to support them. . . . Water puts an end to Fire, which
 4    II,      1|    and heavy in the midst of Water or in Air. These things
 5   III,      6|    Good and the Evil -- like water with water. And that he
 6   III,      6|      Evil -- like water with water. And that he may not be
 7   III,      7|    bounded this by that, the water by [P. 73, l. 8.] sepulchral
 8   III,      7|    dislike going down to the water, so fishes disdain to go
 9   III,      7|    may reach the edge of the water and (then) returns again
10   III,      7|       of fishes, the sons of water. And how do they flee from
11   III,     17|  that it may be moulded with water by the hand of the workman,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License