Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  17|                      17. And yet, O ye great worshippers and
 2   I,  25|        entire world. What do you, O men, endowed with reason,
 3   I,  28|                  28. What say ye, O interpreters of sacred and
 4   I,  31|                               31. O greatest, O Supreme Creator
 5   I,  31|                   31. O greatest, O Supreme Creator of things
 6   I,  31|      Creator of things invisible! O Thou who art Thyself unseen,
 7   I,  31|         be uttered. Grant pardon, O King Supreme, to those who
 8   I,  39|                   39. But lately, O blindness, I worshipped
 9   I,  41|                      41. And yet, O ye who laugh because we
10   I,  43|         of a remote country. Why, O witlings, do you speak of
11   I,  51|                  51. What say ye, O minds incredulous, stubborn,
12   I,  59|      daily conversation. And yet, O you who charge our writings
13  II,   2|          whether when we cry out, O God, or when we make God
14  II,   5|                  5. What say you, O ignorant ones, for whom
15  II,   8|     readiness of belief too, say, O wits, soaked and filled
16  II,  13|            13. Meantime, however, O you who wonder and are astonished
17  II,  16|          your habitual arrogance, O men, who claim God as your
18  II,  24|                          24. Why, O Plato, do you in the Meno
19  II,  25|                 25. What say you, O men, who assign to yourselves
20  II,  35|        with the Supreme? And yet, O ye who do not believe that
21  II,  43|                 43. What say you, O offspring and descendants
22  II,  78|                    78. Wherefore, O men, refrain from obstructing
23 III,  10|        are prematurely delivered. O divinity, pure, holy, free
24 III,  25|           to eating and drinking. O rare and admirable interpretation
25 III,  43|            thou Apollo, and thou, O Neptune, and in your divine
26  IV,   1|           you, and you above all, O Romans, lords and princes
27  IV,  11|                 11. What say you, O fathers of new religions,
28  IV,  16|     assume the honour of my name, O Sais, sprung from the mud
29  IV,  21|     foreign breast? What say you, O men? Did, then, shall I
30  IV,  21|         lulled with broken words? O devout assertion of the
31   V,   2|           What, then, do you say, O you -? Are we to believe
32   V,   8|        the gods. What do you say, O theologians? what, ye priests
33   V,  10|       heaven the gods themselves. O cautious and foreseeing
34   V,  12|          your story consistently. O Abdera, Abdera, what occasions
35   V,  13|     brought up on he-goats' milk. O story ever opposed and most
36   V,  14|                 14. What say you, O races and nations, given
37   V,  26|          gladness." What say you, O wise sons of Erectheus?
38   V,  29|         of worship? What say you, O peoples? what, ye nations
39   V,  45|          defiled with such words. O modesty, worthy of praise!
40  VI,  11|       divine power. What say you, O ye -! Do the gods of heaven
41  VI,  14|       common: Why, pray, is this, O men! that of your own accord
42  VI,  20|                      20. And yet, O you-if it is plain and clear
43  VI,  26|                               26. O dreadful forms of terror
44 VII,   9|      these words: "Is this, then, O Jupiter, or whatever god
45 VII,   9|          Does it not seem to you, O Jupiter, unjust and barbarous
46 VII,  16|                 16. What say you, O you -! is that foul smell,
47 VII,  25|     perfectly voracious appetite? O wonderful greatness of the
48 VII,  27|   purchase their favour. But yet, O piety, what or how great
49 VII,  31| engagement that you should bare? "O sublimity of the gods, excelling
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