Chapter
1 I | hatred be found, the right course would obviously be to cease
2 II | denial of the name we may of course equally deny also the crimes
3 II | profession. I must suppose of course that you do not wish us
4 III | founder, offend any one. Of course if any one proves the sect
5 IV | because it ought to be so. Of course if you do not wish it to
6 VI | be uncovered. It was of course lest immodest pleasure should
7 VIII | requisite preparations. He of course would say: 'An infant is
8 X | gods. Then, too, it will of course follow that the Christians
9 XI | this statement you will of course grant that that god-making
10 XIII | god and some another, of course you offend those whom you
11 XVIII | Prometheus); Who ordered the course of the world according to
12 XX | the elements are out of course, that the natural shape
13 XXI | than this, since it is of course impossible to lie about
14 XXVI | all time and created the course of this world, the embodiment
15 XXX | punishment. Pursue your course, excellent governors, and
16 XXXV | Christians than the vulgar. Of course the other orders in proportion
17 XXXVI | the case of any man, is of course still more so in the case
18 XXXIX | extravagant. It was of us, of course, that Diogenes said, 'the
19 XLVII | us to them. And this, of course, was the reason why philosophy
20 XLVIII| also so disposed the whole course of existence according to
21 L | insane. ~But pursue your course, excellent governors, and
22 App | have followed the right course, my dear Secundus, in investigating
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