Chapter
1 II | our fellow-criminals, when surely the same treatment ought
2 II | indeed deny, and you as surely would compel us under torture
3 IV | has forbidden, does it not surely by that pre-decision lose
4 V | that the worst of men would surely be rooted out by all the
5 IX | too, in the kind of death, surely that is the more cruel method
6 X | Yet if Saturn was a man, surely he sprang from a man; and
7 XI | as Plato believed) was surely found to have been once
8 XII | cast to the beasts; those surely which you attach to Bacchus
9 XV | burlesques find their origin surely in the contempt in which
10 XVI | found there no image. Yet surely if the object of their worship
11 XXI | name with the Jews, as we surely ought to do if we were worshippers
12 XXIII | excellence of divinity, which surely ought to be believed to
13 XXIII | the Christians; and that surely cannot be accounted divinity
14 XXVIII| business is it of yours?' It is surely the same spirits who influence
15 XXX | they are above all men, who surely are alive and take precedence
16 XXXI | disturbance of its other parts, surely we, too, though strangers
17 XXXIII| thou art a man 83.' And surely he rejoices the more at
18 XXXVII| and of such a kind would surely have brought shame upon
19 XLI | calamities and evils. For surely one is bound to hold it
20 XLVIII| we lay down, and it is surely more worthy of belief, that
21 XLVIII| before thy life began : surely nothing; for thou wouldst
22 XLVIII| wilt be re-made. And yet surely thou shalt more easily be
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