Book, Paragraph

  1   I,   3|            testimony of authors, how great nations, and what individual
  2   I,   6|     increased, but they were even in great measure diminished by the
  3   I,  16|            my name is the cause of a great dearth, why am I powerless
  4   I,  17|                    17. And yet, O ye great worshippers and priests
  5   I,  17|             savage disposition? Your great gods, then, know, are subject
  6   I,  28|         grant that there is only one great Being, whom in the long
  7   I,  28|             their existence from the great source of things. And if
  8   I,  33|            life with an idea of that Great Head? In whom has it not
  9   I,  37|              ourselves, you act with great injustice, in regarding
 10   I,  38|              of many heads,-with how great distinctions is He to be
 11   I,  38|            hearts, has freed us from great errors; who, when we were
 12   I,  38|          what God is, who He is, how great and how good; who has permitted
 13   I,  38| inexpressible depths; who, in in His great kindness, has caused it
 14   I,  39|             the paths of truth by so great a teacher, I know what all
 15   I,  39|              received while alive so great gifts, and from whom, when
 16   I,  41|        safety? Do you not invoke the great Hercules himself by offerings,
 17   I,  41|           god, in the temples of the Great Mother, that Phrygian Atys
 18   I,  46|          whole world, and showed how great He was and who He was, by
 19   I,  47|           virtues alone. For however great these things be, how excessively
 20   I,  48|         hurtful,-and that this is no great matter, and deserves no
 21   I,  48|              matter, and deserves no great admiration, is evident,
 22   I,  51|         stubborn, hardened? Did that great Jupiter Capitolinus of yours
 23   I,  53|            ignorance to receive such great deeds with abusive language,
 24   I,  53|              dealing with matters of great, aye, even the greatest
 25   I,  53|             world, nor, in fine, the great gods, or those who, reigning
 26   I,  53|              and let it be known how great He was, all the elements
 27   I,  58|              do not clearly mark its great features. But he who really
 28   I,  59|             the other, he commits as great a blunder who utters masculine
 29   I,  61|        unknown, being involved in so great obscurity, and comprehensible
 30   I,  63|            bestow the blessing of so great knowledge upon, and to lead
 31   I,  65|           messenger and bearer of so great a gift with taunting words;
 32  II,   5|             that men endowed with so great abilities, orators, critics,
 33  II,   5|           increases even more, and a great host strives more boldly
 34  II,  11|       believe and hearken to them in great measure; and what reason
 35  II,  16|             rest, or separated by no great difference? For what is
 36  II,  16|             and not separated by any great interval, since it is on
 37  II,  19|           think themselves something great because they have made for
 38  II,  23|           eating? If you made a very great fire, or surrounded him
 39  II,  30|          lost; it is not only a very great mistake, but shows stupid
 40  II,  30|             rewards await you for so great toil when the day of death
 41  II,  31|            guilty; another conceives great hopes if he shall do no
 42  II,  34|             from whom we look for so great a gift and favour. Now,
 43  II,  34|           His virtues, which were so great, that it can be made good,
 44  II,  40|        houses for themselves at very great expense and with never-ending
 45  II,  45|         framer, the author of things great and invisible, should be
 46  II,  47|             we hold that, to know so great a matter, is not only beyond
 47  II,  52|        reason do we suppose that the great Plato had-a man reverent
 48  II,  53|           they rest their hope of so great a gift on God Supreme, who
 49  II,  64|           more, if your wisdom is so great that you term those things
 50  II,  76|           seeing that you worship so great and so innumerable gods,
 51 III,   3|       supposed that perfection of so great dignity should reside.
 52 III,  10|             and burns to see, in the great halls and palaces of heaven,
 53 III,  16|           wish to be revenged for so great wrongs and insults, and
 54 III,  18|            not in our way. But in so great a matter we cannot know
 55 III,  19|             we fear to ascribe to so great a being even mental graces,
 56 III,  19|             vices, have deserved the great reputation which they have
 57 III,  19|     senseless, as to say that God is great by merely human excellences?
 58 III,  24|        trifle, and are foolish in so great a matter; and, forgetting
 59 III,  31|           trident, lord of the fish, great and small, king of the depths
 60 III,  32|           said that the earth is the Great Mother, because it provides
 61 III,  38|    consecrated; and lest, from their great number, or in ignorance,
 62  IV,  13|             could not be common to a great many; you in fogetfulness,
 63  IV,  16|               shall we dispose of so great a dispute? or what examiner
 64  IV,  16|          there be, what umpire of so great boldness as to attempt,
 65  IV,  17|       befitting the conception of so great a race be shown to us. Show
 66  IV,  20|             contrary, forgetting how great their dignity and grandeur
 67  IV,  22|             the deities, although so great excellence graced her, such
 68  IV,  22|             what stains of vice, how great infamy you heap upon him?
 69  IV,  29|           gain of Venus; to whom the great mother was bound in marriage;
 70  IV,  32|             assumed to themselves so great licence as to foolishly
 71  IV,  33|              enable you to defend so great daring in the writers, pretend
 72  IV,  35|       passions of a vile harlot. The Great Mother, too, adorned with
 73   V,   3|           believe that a deity of so great majesty was dragged down
 74   V,   5|           informed, the birth of the Great Mother of the gods, and
 75   V,   5|              of men; from which this Great Mother, too, as she is called,
 76   V,   7|         which you have stirred up so great and terribly perilous commotions."
 77   V,   7|              his life flies; but the Great Mother of the gods gathers
 78   V,   8|            he is to be believed, the Great Mother, too, must be said
 79   V,   9|              your having bemired the Great Mother of the gods with
 80   V,  10|     quickened to be the offspring of great Jupiter. It is not easy
 81   V,  13|           avoided and fled from. The Great Mother loved him-if as a
 82   V,  21|             what wickedness, and how great recklessness, he had a little
 83   V,  39|            into the sanctuary of the Great Mother, is it not in imitation
 84  VI,   2|             another; but, as becomes great minds, should weigh all
 85  VI,   2|              of the admiration which great minds excite?
 86  VI,  10|           pray, is the meaning of so great audacity to fashion to yourself
 87  VI,  18|          stretch themselves out to a great length, and extend to immensity
 88  VI,  21|            ample beard, which was of great weight and philosophic thickness,
 89  VI,  26|            breasts protruding and of great size, little drinking cups,
 90 VII,  10|    circumstances. This point demands great care; nor is it usual either
 91 VII,  13|             a man famed for his very great power and authority, were
 92 VII,  13|         bowing down of the one, very great honour is given to the other,
 93 VII,  13|             and he is made to appear great whom the respect of an inferior
 94 VII,  15|          pray, you ask, is this very great honour? One much more in
 95 VII,  24|            ground: but if it seems a great and grand thing to slay
 96 VII,  27|            yet, O piety, what or how great is this honour which is
 97 VII,  29|             dissolved, there is very great danger that his breathing
 98 VII,  30|              or, if you suppose that great honour is done to them,
 99 VII,  30|            with wine? or what or how great is the power in it, that,
100 VII,  32|            and must be satiated with great banquets, and long filled
101 VII,  33|          passionate impulses? Is the Great Mother rendered more calm,
102 VII,  34|            From this it is clear, in great measure, that men are unable
103 VII,  34|      creatures, and that there is no great difference between themselves
104 VII,  37|            so, and since there is so great difference between our opinions
105 VII,  39|            games being then decreed, great care was, on the one hand,
106 VII,  43|              whom it would be held a great crime to punish one for
107 VII,  43|           this cruelty, which was so great that, his offspring being
108 VII,  48|             this is the case that in great peoples, in nations, nay,
109 VII,  49|                          49. But the Great Mother, also, says my opponent,
110 VII,  49|            was a cause of safety and great joy to the people. For,
111 VII,  50|              given by so many and so great leaders by their military
112 VII,  50|          slaughter of so many and so great armies, and was in danger
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