Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   9|       rains not from heaven, my opponent says, and we are in distress
 2   I,  32|        denial of an unbelieving opponent.
 3   I,  36|                36. But, says my opponent, the deities are not inimical
 4   I,  42|        42. You worship, says my opponent, one who was born a mere
 5   I,  42|         very highest moment. My opponent, becoming more mad and more
 6   I,  43|                          43. My opponent will perhaps meet me with
 7   I,  59|         59. Your narratives, my opponent says, are overrun with barbarisms
 8   I,  61|         61. What, then, says my opponent, could not the Supreme Ruler
 9  II,  37|       vessels of urine. But, an opponent will say, it was necessary
10  II,  37|  purpose? They have a share, my opponent says, in perfecting the
11  II,  65|                     65. Nay, my opponent says, if God is powerful,
12  II,  65|    witticisms? Unless, then, my opponent says, I shall be a Christian,
13  II,  71|      Four hundred years ago, my opponent says, your religion did
14  II,  74|                74. And why, my, opponent says, did God, the Ruler
15  II,  76|   rights of free birth? But, my opponent says, in such mischances
16 III,   6|      over all. It is Saturn, my opponent says, and Janus, Minerva,
17 III,  22|                 22. You err, my opponent says, and are deceived;
18 III,  24|             24. No one, says my opponent, makes supplication to the
19 III,  25|                   25. Unxia, my opponent says, presides over the
20 III,  26|       and passionate desire. My opponent says that Mars has power
21  IV,  13| unwilling to believe us, let my opponent ask the Egyptians, Persians,
22   V,  24|                     24. But, my opponent says, these are not the
23   V,  32|        32. But you err, says my opponent, and are mistaken, and show,
24   V,  37|       In the grove of Henna, my opponent says, the maiden Proserpine
25   V,  37|         burying of the seed, my opponent says, is meant by the rape
26   V,  37|      the seed sown? Jupiter, my opponent says, having turned himself
27   V,  41|       we speak of lust, says my opponent, and anger, as restrained
28   V,  41|   mention of lust and anger, my opponent says, was likely to defile
29   V,  42|     When we name Attis, says my opponent, we mean and speak of the
30  VI,   3|        these barriers. This, my opponent says, is the temple of Mars,
31  VI,   4|                 4. But, says my opponent, it is not for this reason
32  VI,  17|        17. But you err, says my opponent, and are mistaken, for we
33 VII,  16|      the gods? Because, says my opponent, it is right to honour the
34 VII,  19|        19. But you err, says my opponent, and fall into mistakes;
35 VII,  19|         slain? Because, says my opponent, to the gods above, and
36 VII,  21|       It is not lawful, says my opponent, that these things should
37 VII,  30|                30. But, says my opponent, you are insulting us without
38 VII,  32|       The purification, says my opponent, of the mother of the gods
39 VII,  33|     honoured by these, says thy opponent; and if they have any recollection
40 VII,  38|        cannot be angry, says my opponent, and their nature is not
41 VII,  42|         was led across, says my opponent, before the games began
42 VII,  46|                46. But, says my opponent, if he was not a god, why,
43 VII,  47|        a present deity, says my opponent, why, after its arrival,
44 VII,  49|     Great Mother, also, says my opponent, being summoned from Phrygian
45 VII,  50|       been brought yet, says my opponent, nor asked to show favour.
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