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 1      II|       only a man pleasing to the gods, they on the strength of
 2      II|        noble and a friend of the gods." These are the very words
 3    VIII|          class the man among the gods.~ ~
 4       X|      himself to sacrifice to the gods, devoured the heart and
 5      XI|         taught me to worship the gods in this way and to recognize
 6      XI|     regular in converse with the gods." Who can possibly allow
 7      XI|      gift of conversing with the gods. But let us for the moment
 8      XI|  frequent in their conversations gods, whether seen or unseen ?
 9      XI|        to him a knowledge of the gods of so mysterious character
10      XV|        in these words: "That the gods would never have deprived
11      XV|         happy and beloved of the gods, even though they should
12      XV|          that on its showing the gods would never have deprived
13    XVII|        of certain other Hellenic gods. And the master of them
14      XX|         of men who were equal to gods ? But what possesses me
15      XX|        to call them the peers of gods and chaff them about their
16      XX|   considered themselves to be, " Gods," answered Iarchas ; who,
17   XXIII|          the land of Hellas, the gods themselves proclaimed him
18   XXIII|          be the companion of the gods, inasmuch as they sent on
19    XXIV|         who was the companion of gods, whether seen or unseen,
20   XXVII|        but derived from what the gods revealed to him. And when
21   XXVII| Apollonius calling these Indians gods, and enrolling himself as
22   XXVII|            For they are not only gods, but are adorned with all
23   XXVII|         only men that are really gods and that deserve this ...
24   XXVII|       persons above mentioned as gods and teachers of the sage,
25  XXXIII|       for myself, partly for the gods." And yet the man who in
26 XXXVIII|          those whom he accounted gods and also did not hesitate
27 XXXVIII|    virtue and the darling of the gods, is to bind on his brow
28     XLI|          the reputation of being gods, unless the glory they acquired
29     XLI|          whom you consider to be gods, your honey-cake and your
30     XLI|          your prayers ask of the gods, inasmuch as you admit that
31     XLI|     clean sweep of all the other gods, and sacrifice to Necessity
32     XLI|          doubt you would have no gods left; and rightly too, seeing
33    XLII|         of Providence and of the gods, yet , in addition to these
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