Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  17|     your deities? For, to be angry, what else is it than to
 2   I,  19|     greater wrong than to be angry with some, and to injure
 3 III,  11|    they have no reason to be angry, whom they see and perceive
 4  IV,  31|      matters, they are often angry, to the national ruin?
 5  IV,  37|   know not what anger is are angry with us, * and they are
 6   V,  15|     should be asserted to he angry with us, since we have neither
 7   V,  37| terms. Ceres was enraged and angry, and received the parts
 8 VII,   5|      that the gods are never angry; nay, rather, that no passion
 9 VII,   6|    be given?-before they are angry and roused, or when they
10 VII,   7|     the gods of heaven being angry for any reason with those
11 VII,   8|     mind, and lays aside his angry feelings and frenzy; that
12 VII,   8|     relief is brought to the angry god? Do the gods, then,
13 VII,   9| purpose then, viz., that the angry deities may be soothed;
14 VII,   9|     us that the gods are not angry at any time, and that they
15 VII,  36|   judge that the deities are angry and perturbed, and given
16 VII,  38|      immortal gods cannot be angry, says my opponent, and their
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