Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  23|          gods, and those who are worthy to have and to wear the
 2   I,  27|         just and honourable, and worthy of His ear. Not that He
 3   I,  28|          most sagacious, and not worthy of any blame, who revere
 4   I,  31|       incomprehensible! Thou art worthy, Thou art verily worthy-if
 5   I,  37|  injustice, in regarding that as worthy of condemnation in us which
 6   I,  38|         and condition; is He not worthy to be called and to be esteemed
 7   I,  39|       concerning those which are worthy, I offer no insult to any
 8   I,  44|          with His nature, as was worthy of Him, in the generosity
 9  II,   1|      persons? (B) And He was not worthy that you should listen to
10  II,  11|        deny either that they are worthy of praise for the soundness
11  II,  36|       many of whose thoughts are worthy of God, and not such as
12  II,  49|    honourable men, and have been worthy of praise, have reached
13 III,   1| distinction in this respect, and worthy to have learned the truth;
14 III,  16|        in man,-what, I pray you, worthy of admiration, or comely,-
15 III,  35|                          35. Men worthy to be remembered in the
16  IV,  11|       only there are any who are worthy to bear and hold that most
17  IV,  30|          the heart, and a belief worthy of the gods; nor does it
18  IV,  35|       next to the gods, and most worthy of reverence; and, shameful
19   V,  42|      guilty, that he should seem worthy to be named from a mutilated
20   V,  45|      with such words. O modesty, worthy of praise! you blush to
21  VI,   2|         unless they are just and worthy of the admiration which
22 VII,   2|     should be, and that they are worthy to be called by this name;
23 VII,  12|      other of small fortune, but worthy of praise for his integrity
24 VII,  12|          they are true gods, and worthy to be ranked under this
25 VII,  15|        place, what is an opinion worthy of the gods, right and honourable,
26 VII,  26|          think that it is either worthy to be given to the gods,
27 VII,  37|       them from us than opinions worthy of the gods, and most appropriate
28 VII,  41|       find that there is nothing worthy of the gods, and, as has
29 VII,  41|         been said often, nothing worthy to be referred to the splendour
30 VII,  41|         free from guilt, and not worthy of punishment at all, Jupiter
31 VII,  51|       origin, or showed kindness worthy of the gods, who, mixing
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