Part

 1  Text|           For 'Fire loved Fire, and Wind Wind, and Water Water.'
 2  Text|           Fire loved Fire, and Wind Wind, and Water Water.' Or, perhaps,
 3  Text|           of his family. And so the Wind loved the Wind and they
 4  Text|           And so the Wind loved the Wind and they became one thing—
 5  Text|            and Water with Water and Wind with Wind, it necessarily
 6  Text|            with Water and Wind with Wind, it necessarily follows
 7  Text|          weaker than Water was, nor Wind than Wind ; and (so) these
 8  Text|            Water was, nor Wind than Wind ; and (so) these Natures
 9  Text|         behind moved the Element of Wind and impelled it, as Bardaisan
10  Text|             from the North-West the Wind was hurled by whatever it
11  Text|            in their own selves that Wind cannot set in motion the
12  Text|          Maker to make ? And if the Wind blew, lo, it would have
13  Text|       creative power. And even that Wind would not have been able
14  Text|              216. l. 3[ ... and the Wind would not have sufficed
15  Text|          Light and the Fire and the Wind . . ~[l. 12.] and it would
16  Text|         very same thing come Light, Wind, Darkness, experiment, vision—
17  Text|            if it (the Fire) kindles Wind like chips of wood, or has
18  Text|         white, the Fire is red, the Wind is blue, the Water is green,'
19  Text|            and what is the taste of Wind, and what is the smell of
20  Text|           Water ; and again because Wind also is lighter than Fire
21  Text|       because Light is lighter than Wind it is manifest that it is
22  Text|       manifest that it is above the Wind. For each of them is lighter
23  Text|             Philosopher. For if the Wind smote the Fire which was
24  Text|          Water and the Fire and the Wind, and was 'the beginning [
25  Text|        Natures], that is, Light and Wind and Water and Fire . . .
26  Text| sheath-skins belong to Light and to Wind and to Fire and to Water
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