Book, Paragraph

1   I,  54|          would never grant their assent with so ready belief to
2   I,  58|        be beguiled into a forced assent to a proposition.
3  II,   6|          and joining together to assent with that readiness of belief
4  II,   9|        not defend with a kind of assent, as it were, like that of
5  II,  12|        of the nations, who would assent? who would listen? who would
6 III,   4|  numberless families of gods; we assent, agree, and do not examine
7  IV,  25| Sophocles the Athenian, with the assent of all his spectators? Who
8   V,  14|          it with an unhesitating assent, that hair grows on a dead
9  VI,  17|       being impaired? With ready assent? And what do the gods seek
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