Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|      are discovered to be more impious, but that they themselves
 2   I,  29|     charged before you with an impious religion? and because we
 3   I,  62|     been cut down and slain by impious robbers, would Apollo be
 4   I,  65|          65. Oh ungrateful and impious age, prepared for its own
 5  II,  45|     But let this monstrous and impious fancy be put far from us,
 6  II,  46|       belief, so monstrous and impious, be put far from us, that.
 7  II,  55|     not to wander in a maze of impious and mad conjectures, we
 8 III,   5|       then, you are yourselves impious who serve a few gods, but
 9 III,   7|     refute, rebut his rash and impious words, and show that they
10 III,  15|    this really degrading, most impious, and insulting, to attribute
11 III,  28|        daily harassed? Call us impious as much as you please, contemners
12  IV,   6|        more truth-disgraceful, impious, to introduce some pretended
13  IV,  27|      to say either that we are impious, or that you are pious,
14  IV,  30| ourselves, that as you call us impious and irreligious, and, on
15  IV,  31|      other course manifests an impious spirit, and a blindness
16   V,  22|      women, it would indeed be impious, but the wrong done in slandering
17   V,  23|        be found so imbued with impious ideas as to believe such
18   V,  29|        have devised what is so impious, we do not call upon him
19   V,  30|    speak of those as atheists, impious, sacrilegious, who either
20   V,  40|       thought or believed more impious than that the rape of Proserpine
21  VI,   1|       Having shown briefly how impious and infamous are the opinions
22  VI,   1|       not as though we cherish impious and wicked dispositions,
23  VI,  21|       robber was speaking with impious mockery, if the deity was
24  VI,  22|        the offenders for their impious sacrilege. Neither. then.
25  VI,  22|       youths, and punish their impious touch with terrible suffering?
26  VI,  24|       the gods, put away their impious deeds, and, changing their
27  VI,  26|        fears of the wicked and impious? Were the men of that age
28 VII,  30|   language? Is not this, then, impious, and perfectly sacrilegious,
29 VII,  37|       are we, on the one hand, impious, or you pious, since the
30 VII,  40|        the nation, and from an impious band of conspirators; but
31 VII,  43|       god who is so unjust, so impious, and who does not observe
32 VII,  48|      in which men now live are impious and objectionable; that
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