Part, Dialogue
1 1, 3| become the habitation of gods or divine spirits, speak
2 1, 3| beasts; and so also the other gods transmigrate into base and
3 1, 4| he lives the life of the gods, fed on ambrosia and drunk
4 1, 4| humanly, they being not gods, but men and animals? It
5 1, 4| the niggard nectar of the gods, do you lose that which
6 1, 5| into captivity both men and gods;~By pity's hand alone, oh
7 1, 5| usually captivates men and gods, but only by causing the
8 1, 5| inebriated with the drink of the gods, is incomparably higher
9 1, 5| fight anon with the high gods.~No more in my Æolian caves
10 2, 1| men were consorting with gods and spirits and were in
11 2, 1| the sonnet.~46.~If I by gods, by heroes and by men~Be
12 2, 1| Love precedes all the other gods, and therefore it is no
13 2, 2| who may be heroes like to gods. Now why should we force
14 2, 2| the stars, to be equal to gods, and to understand the good
15 2, 2| truth of very truth, God of gods, through whom all is full
16 2, 3| that the delight of the gods is ascribed to drinking,
17 2, 4| noose.~Men, heroes, and gods!~Who be on earth, or near
18 2, 4| be substantially as many gods as there are intelligences,
19 2, 4| therefore they are not formally gods, but denominatively divine,
20 2, 5| to be found. I thank the gods, because in that time, when
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