Chapter

1      II|      to one another, your own poet himself will recount it,
2    XVII| TESTIMONY OF HOMER.~ ~And the poet Homer, using the license
3    XVII|   from contention. So far the poet Homer.~ ~
4    XXIV|       not exist. For thus the poet, in another passage, and
5     XXV|       philosopher condemn the poet Homer for saying, "Even
6  XXVIII|     of this? To show that the poet transferred to his own poem
7  XXVIII| imitation of this in what the poet has ascribed to Otus and
8  XXVIII|        he would find that the poet, though he certainly never
9  XXVIII|     wickedest action. For the poet, calling him Ate, says that
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