Chapter

 1      II|          himself will recount it, saying:~ ~Such was the shock when
 2       V|  overthrows the opinion of Plato, saying that God does not exist
 3    XVII|          one God only, somewhere, saying to Achilles by the mouth
 4     XIX|           so, is evident from his saying that unity and one differ
 5    XXII|         him clearly and evidently saying that He who is unbegotten
 6   XXIII| perishable, he now introduces him saying the very opposite; and he
 7    XXIV|          he represents Phoenix as saying to Achilles, "Even the gods
 8    XXIV|           can gather from Plato's saying, "gods of gods?" For Homer,
 9    XXIV|       least he introduces Ulysses saying of Hector to Achilles, "
10     XXV|        does Plato blame Homer for saying that the gods are not inflexible,
11     XXV|        condemn the poet Homer for saying, "Even the gods themselves
12     XXV|           being charmed with that saying of God to Moses, "I am the
13   XXVII|        refuse to believe. For his saying that the soul is judged
14     XXX|          of the formation of man, saying, "And God made man, taking
15    XXXI|     receive the suggestion of his saying that God exists in a fiery
16   XXXVI|    yourselves say, bears witness, saying, "Of all men Socrates is
17  XXXVII|          nothing of what they are saying," -- plainly and manifestly
18  XXXVII|          nothing of what they are saying.~ ~
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