Book, Chapter

1    II,      XVI|     no one who is troubled by bodily ailments is judged as a
2   III,       XI|     suspicion as not being in bodily form. For any one might
3   III,      XIV|       always," because of the bodily separation which was about
4   III,    XVIII| height, and not receiving any bodily harm thereby. And the more
5    IV          |   soul, and troubled in every bodily sense, so that we almost |
6    IV,       XI|       transitory life, or the bodily variation in the different
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