(The dog) with its nostrils tracking out the fragments of the beast’s limbs, and the breath from their feet that they leave in the soft grass.[[567]]
(102)
Thus all things have their share of breath and smell.
Thus have all things thought by fortune’s will.... And inasmuch as the rarest things came together in their fall.
(The heart), dwelling in the sea of blood that runs in opposite directions, where chiefly is what men call thought; for the blood round the heart is the thought of men. R. P. 178 a.
For the wisdom of men grows according to what is before them. R. P. 177.