Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  64|       and by celebrating their games and birthdays, those whom
 2  IV,   9|      rings, the front seats at games and shows, honours in the
 3  IV,  31|        again, if at the solemn games and sacred races the dancer
 4  IV,  32|     the fictions of poets, and games arranged for pleasure. It
 5  IV,  35|        the gods? At the public games, too, the colleges of all
 6  IV,  37|      times, both because their games had been celebrated with
 7 VII,   9|      Did I ever celebrate your games with too little reverence
 8 VII,  33|                    33. But the games which you celebrate, called
 9 VII,  33|      is shown to her if at her games she sees that shameful actions
10 VII,  34|       they are affected by the games, and think that the minds
11 VII,  34|        are soothed by enjoying games; and because they have pleasure
12 VII,  38|      told occurred because the games had been celebrated carelessly,
13 VII,  38|      gods despised sacrifices, games, and other acts of worship,
14 VII,  39|      with rods. Then, when the games were ended, and the races
15 VII,  39|      if the respect due to the games were paid to them, and they
16 VII,  39|    away. The repetition of the games being then decreed, great
17 VII,  41|     the dancer's vitiating the games, for when he might have
18 VII,  42|        my opponent, before the games began to be celebrated.
19 VII,  42|      care was not given to his games. But if from mistake or
20 VII,  43|     Jupiter sought to have his games celebrated, and that afresh,
21 VII,  43|       to him the defect in the games occasioned by the dancer,
22 App     | displeased, and are soothed by games and sacrifices, or are something
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