Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3| devastation. Very many hailstorms fall upon and assail all things.
 2   I,  31|      throughout the whole of life fall on bended knee, and offer
 3  II,  30|          mire, overwhelmed by the fall of overhanging rocks and
 4  II,  44|            and not suffer them to fall into dangerous pleasures?
 5  II,  50|      weakness, ready and prone to fall into vice. In our opinion,
 6  II,  54|        God by such a question, we fall into the opposite sin, doing
 7  II,  59|         air, which makes the rain fall drop by drop, which has
 8  II,  69|          meaning there was in the fall of thunderbolts, or in the
 9  II,  74|       perished, showers sometimes fall which should have dropped
10 III,  23|    temples and parts of cities to fall into ashes devoured by flames?
11 III,  40|        them because they rise and fall together, six of them being
12  IV,   1|           wish these blessings to fall to our lot? For if, while
13  VI,  16|     handle when praying, at times fall into ruins from the constant
14  VI,  16|         on which their excrements fall? Blush, then, even though
15 VII,   4|           of cattle, if ever they fall and expire pitiably before
16 VII,  19|        err, says my opponent, and fall into mistakes; for in sacrificing
17 VII,  32|       pipe? Do the gods of heaven fall asleep, so that they should
18 App     |          puer matrimus happens to fall, stumbling through some
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