Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  41|     grow in effeminacy to a woman's habits and luxury?
 2  IV,  21|  find his origin in man and woman? And unless both sexes abandoned
 3  IV,  21|  you say Jove sprang from a woman's womb, seeing that your
 4   V,  18|    then commanded a captive woman from Corniculum to learn
 5   V,  18| meaning of this: Ocrisia, a woman of the greatest wisdom divos
 6   V,  22|     hastened to the name of woman; he is again declared to
 7   V,  24|  when Proserpine, not yet a woman and still a maiden, was
 8  VI,  10|    that is represented as a woman, and has one countenance,
 9  VI,  12|    tender limbs, and with a woman's perfectly free and easily
10  VI,  14|    harlot's gauds or from a woman's ornaments, from camels'
11  VI,  22|  king of Cyprus, loved as a woman an image of Venus, which
12 VII,  44|   conceived and born from a woman's womb, who bad by yearly
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