Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|          day advanced in posts of honour, in offices of power? Do
 2   I,   3|        time that our sect won the honour of this appellation. For
 3   I,  41|      consecrating shrines to him, honour father Liber, who was torn
 4   I,  41|           Martius, and do you not honour him with priests and with
 5   I,  65|        every kind of flattery and honour receive him into your houses,
 6  II,   2|          men back from seeking to honour the gods. Is He then denounced
 7  II,   3|          with and deprived of all honour? But if haughtiness of mind
 8  II,  34|    fitting that we should seek to honour him from whom we look for
 9 III,   3|          sovereigns, but whatever honour belongs to them is found
10 III,   6|         not merely to stain their honour, but, by the natures assigned
11 III,  16|          to them merely by way of honour, and for form's sake which
12 III,  16|  contrivance, and wished to do us honour also by some kind of worship,
13  IV,   1|           Piety, Concord, Safety, Honour, Virtue, Happiness, and
14  IV,   2|           safety of the safe, the honour of the respected, the victory
15  IV,   4|       long ago, when the national honour was brought under the yoke
16  IV,  16|           thus dare to assume the honour of my name, O Sais, sprung
17  IV,  27|        required by their majesty, honour, and worship? For either
18  IV,  34|           have they obtained this honour even at your hands, that
19   V,   9|           regardless of piety and honour, who is chief in the temples?
20   V,  17|         believe that there is any honour in that which the worthless
21   V,  18|        when women show her divine honour a jar of wine is placed
22   V,  22|   Catamitus, were robbed of their honour and chastity. It is the
23   V,  27| stealthily and by fraud? is their honour snatched from virgins resisting
24   V,  28|           Greece erects phalli in honour of father Bacchus, and the
25  VI,   3|         of wine. And what greater honour or dignity can we ascribe
26  VI,   3|           living being? For do we honour Him with shrines, and by
27  VI,   3|      things, and to think this an honour, not an insult. We ask,
28  VI,   9|           they not think that any honour is shown to them by you?
29 VII,  13|       rites were instituted to do honour to the gods of heaven, and
30 VII,  13|          do, they do to show them honour, and to magnify the powers
31 VII,  13|      something, and read, to give honour to the gods, and make them
32 VII,  13|        and added to them? For all honour, which is said to be offered
33 VII,  13|        giver, and the increase of honour of the receiver. As, if
34 VII,  13|       down of the one, very great honour is given to the other, and
35 VII,  14|        conceding and ascribing of honour about which we are speaking
36 VII,  14|           where is there room for honour among the gods, or what
37 VII,  14|     offering of some gift. For if honour increases and augments the
38 VII,  14|        received the gift, and the honour conferred on him; and thus
39 VII,  15|         say, do you think that no honour should be given to the gods
40 VII,  15|       give them even the greatest honour, since we have been taught
41 VII,  15|    especial power over us, to pay honour to all men even, of whatever
42 VII,  15|           ask, is this very great honour? One much more in accordance
43 VII,  15|          do not rejoice in having honour heaped on them, that they
44 VII,  15|        what is said, what kind of honour is this, to bind a wether,
45 VII,  15|           his sight? What kind of honour is it to invite a god to
46 VII,  15|           with dogs? What kind of honour is it, having set on fire
47 VII,  16|           is that a favour and an honour to the deity? and are the
48 VII,  16|          opponent, it is right to honour the gods of heaven with
49 VII,  17|          offer sacrifices in your honour, not of other things and
50 VII,  17|        you would consider this an honour, or rather a most outrageous
51 VII,  17|        filth? But, you reply, you honour the gods with the carcasses
52 VII,  17|        with which you magnify the honour of the gods, swelling and
53 VII,  17|         new kinds of food? do you honour them with savours and juices,
54 VII,  18|           to the gods, to do them honour and show reverence for them,
55 VII,  21|         it is with whose head the honour is paid which you owe? It
56 VII,  23|           been worshipped with no honour.-for whatever is mild and
57 VII,  25|      should be brought to do them honour? Are the gods of heaven
58 VII,  27|         desiring it so fondly. We honour the gods with this, some
59 VII,  27|         what or how great is this honour which is caused by the odour
60 VII,  27|           drops. Does this, then, honour and magnify the celestial
61 VII,  29|    pottages, and victims slain in honour of them, do they drench
62 VII,  30|          given to them to do them honour; that their eminence may
63 VII,  30|         if you suppose that great honour is done to them, if you
64 VII,  30|  sacrilegious, to give that as an honour which, if you take too eagerly,
65 VII,  31|         consecrated. What kind of honour, then, is this, in which
66 VII,  31|           this is a wrong, not an honour. For what if the deity shall
67 VII,  31|           is compelled to receive honour conditionally? For if all
68 VII,  31|           as I prescribe, as much honour as I decide and determine
69 VII,  32|        let there be, as you wish, honour in wine and in incense,
70 VII,  32|       heard them, they think that honour has been shown to them,
71 VII,  33|          or does Flora think that honour is shown to her if at her
72 VII,  36|        that, by wine and incense, honour is given to the gods, and
73 VII,  39|          circenses, celebrated in honour of Jupiter the supreme,
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