Book, Paragraph

 1 III,  11|       say, partly in the vile stories, partly in the shameful
 2 III,  12|      and authority. For these stories either do not concern us,
 3  IV,  30| yourselves invent about them, stories so degrading. For it is
 4   V,   1|     Now if they seemed to you stories of such absurdity, some
 5   V,   1|      adduce only one of these stories which are so numerous; that
 6   V,  15| certain persons to write such stories, or have suffered them,
 7   V,  23|      ideas as to believe such stories, or receive them, or hand
 8   V,  24|     avail your cause if these stories are not yours, while those
 9   V,  24|      gods as others, and that stories are there publicly related
10   V,  30|  reflecting on such monstrous stories in my own mind, I have long
11   V,  32|    and boorish. For all those stories which seem to you disgraceful,
12   V,  32|      like manner in the other stories also one thing indeed is
13   V,  33|  meanings underlie these vain stories? For we who assert that
14   V,  34|    with you that in all these stories stags are spoken of instead
15   V,  35|    whether you think that all stories about the gods, that is,
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