Chapter
1 II | of course that you do not wish us to perish, whom you believe
2 II | tells you what he is; you wish to hear what he is not.
3 II | him; it is not lawful to wish it; and therefore no compulsion
4 II | to defeat the laws. You wish him to deny that he is guilty,
5 IV | unlawful merely because you wish it, not because it ought
6 IV | Of course if you do not wish it to be lawful because
7 VI | religious restrictions. ~Now I wish these most religious guardians
8 VIII | follows that you no longer wish to be that which you never
9 IX | unlawful for them, and you wish through it to inveigle them
10 XIII | a common prostitute (I wish it had at least been Lais
11 XVIII | in case any one should wish to enquire about God, and
12 XXIV | divinity in such a way as to wish the sway of highest rule
13 XXIV | allow me to worship whom I wish, but compel me to worship
14 XXIV | compel me to worship whom I wish not. No one, not even a
15 XXIV | Whose we all are, whether we wish it or no. But with you a
16 XXIV | to worship whatever you wish except the True God, as
17 XXXII | wills; and therefore we wish that to be safe which He
18 XXXIII| not even he himself would wish to be called a god. If he
19 XXXIV | towards God, you who wish Him to be propitious to
20 XXXV | reason has counselled, I wish to demonstrate your fidelity
21 XXXV | how to utter than how to wish for a new Caesar. ~'But
22 XXXVI | we are alike forbidden to wish, or do, or speak, or think,
23 XLIX | am a Christian, only if I wish to be one : you then will
24 XLIX | will only condemn me, if I wish to be condemned; but since
25 L | case she should succumb and wish to do so. Zeno Eleates,
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