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1 I, 1 | the only instance in which human curiosity grows torpid.
2 I, 4 | although it is more usual in human conduct to determine obscurities
3 I, 4 | the frivolous works of the human hand; the temperance, by
4 I, 7 | in the wickedness of the human mind, and utters its falsehoods
5 I, 8 | new-born infants from all human intercourse, and to have
6 I, 8 | exiled from all sound of the human voice, they might form their
7 I, 8 | supposed to be the first of the human race. But it will not be
8 I, 9 | gods to be defended by a human being!~
9 I, 10 | the will and pleasure of human judgment, so that there
10 I, 10 | Being on the low level of human condition, imbuing the gods
11 I, 10 | Venus with an arrow from a human hand; he keeps Mars a prisoner
12 I, 10 | zest, over the spilling of human blood, (and) over those
13 I, 12 | with you the figure is a human one, with us the wood is
14 I, 15 | your own transactions in human blood and infanticide have
15 I, 15 | matter to you to pant for human entrails, because you devour
16 I, 15 | only a trifle to lick up human blood, when you draw out
17 I, 16 | peculiarly removed from the human state as to be liable neither
18 I, 19 | inherited conceit, that the human spirit is to reappear in
19 I, 20 | to the full that fault of human nature, that those things
20 II, 1 | is the material part of human error, owing to the wiles
21 II, 2 | to have passed from the human state to the divine, as
22 II, 5 | into zones, except where human residence has been rendered
23 II, 5 | utility and injury of the human race? For you cannot pretend
24 II, 6 | therefore, are those supports of human learning, which, by their
25 II, 7 | them on a par with our own human mediocrity, or whether they
26 II, 7 | Meanwhile, that these were only human beings, is clear from the
27 II, 7 | of even the old prizes of human glory, tear up their decrees
28 II, 7 | the said gods were merely human? Now what is there strange
29 II, 7 | subject to the dishonour of human casualties, or crimes, or
30 II, 7 | such things when they were human beings, nor because they
31 II, 8 | their names, apart from the human surnames which distinguish
32 II, 8 | worship both wild animals and human beings, they combined both
33 II, 9 | which have become gods from human beings, and those which
34 II, 9 | with a devotion more than human, yoked themselves to her
35 II, 12 | THE ORIGINAL DEITIES WERE HUMAN WITH SOME VERY QUESTIONABLE
36 II, 12 | CHARACTERISTICS. SATURN OR TIME WAS HUMAN. INCONSISTENCIES OF OPINION
37 II, 12 | all these gods were once human beings (not, indeed, to
38 II, 12 | quality? Why not make a human person, or even a mythic
39 II, 12 | because you say he is a human being; nor, on the other
40 II, 12 | account mean that he was ever human. No doubt, in the accounts
41 II, 12 | described as living on earth in human guise. Anything whatever
42 II, 12 | us plainly that he was a human being. Since, therefore,
43 II, 12 | Since, therefore, Saturn was human, he came undoubtedly from
44 II, 12 | came undoubtedly from a human stock; and more, because
45 II, 12 | Saturn and his family were human beings. We have in our possession,
46 II, 13 | XIII. THE GODS HUMAN AT FIRST. WHO HAD THE AUTHORITY
47 II, 13 | DIVINE? JUPITER NOT ONLY HUMAN, BUT IMMORAL.~Manifest cases,
48 II, 13 | beings. He who has compared human things with divine will
49 II, 13 | the nutriment accorded to human beings; and, as he deserved
50 II, 14 | have been admitted from the human state to the honours of
51 II, 14 | the son of Apollo, half human, although the grandson of
52 II, 15 | about, in every part of the human race, and in every nation,
53 app, frag| those (deities), then, by human names, not by their own,
54 app, frag| most impure and truculent human beings; beings who, had
55 app, frag| divinity either, for he was a human being; his father's flight
56 app, frag| flight escaped him. To this human being, of such a character,
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