Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  53|               53. Cease in your ignorance to receive such great deeds
 2  II,   1|    threatens them through their ignorance.
 3  II,   7|       the weakness and wretched ignorance of these theories is greater
 4  II,  17|      folly and the blindness of ignorance demanded what is injurious
 5  II,  25|     learned, and lays aside the ignorance which till now clung to
 6  II,  51|        regarded as showing your ignorance.
 7  II,  55|    preferable, rather remain in ignorance and want of knowledge than
 8  II,  72|   dispel the blindness of their ignorance.
 9 III,   5|       or if you claim that your ignorance of the rest should be pardoned,
10 III,  16|   fallen into any error through ignorance. For if you confessed that
11 III,  20|         their want of skill and ignorance of the future. One is instructed
12 III,  38|       their great number, or in ignorance, any god should be passed
13 III,  43|      other is Novensills, since ignorance of the facts and confusion
14  IV,   1|     pray you to teach us in our ignorance, by what course, in what
15  IV,  13|         and make sport of men's ignorance. Even now we are ashamed
16  IV,  24|         of pork, breakfasted in ignorance upon the son of Lycaon,
17  IV,  31|    patrimus let go the thong in ignorance, or could not hold to the
18   V,  28|     difficulties, because, from ignorance of the route, he did not
19  VI,  11|       seem to have ever been in ignorance; and you think it better
20 VII,   6|        treading among clouds of ignorance, has committed any blunder,-
21 VII,  38|        is vain, and shows utter ignorance, to blame us for giving
22 VII,  42| forgiveness to the blindness of ignorance? But it was necessary that
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