Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   5|         there is no man who would dare to attribute to our times
 2   I,  24|          is placed in open light, dare to assert in their frenzy
 3   I,  25|         men, endowed with reason, dare to assert? What do you dare
 4   I,  25|       dare to assert? What do you dare to prate of? What do you
 5   I,  42|         superstition, (even they) dare not allege these things
 6  II,  13|         paths of doctrine. Do you dare to laugh at us because we
 7  II,  13|      meditation about Him? Do you dare to laugh at us, because
 8  II,  13|           grow to manhood? Do you dare to laugh at us because we
 9  II,  14|                        14. Do you dare to laugh at us when we speak
10  II,  56|       which men of ability do not dare to overthrow, to destroy,
11 III,  11|                       11. And you dare to charge us with offending
12 III,  15|      which no modest person would dare to recount, and describe,
13  IV,  16|      words as these: "Do you thus dare to assume the honour of
14  IV,  27| shamefulness and baseness, do you dare, without violation of modesty,
15  IV,  31|         the earth: and yet do you dare to deny that the gods are
16  IV,  36|  apologies. And after this do you dare to wonder whence these ills
17   V,   8|     blaspheme your gods, would he dare to say against them anything
18   V,  30|     accustomed to wonder that you dare to speak of those as atheists,
19   V,  31|        injury of the gods, do you dare to assert that the gods
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