Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  21|       desire extend further, not knowing that there is any thing
 2  II,  23|      vipers, tarantulae, without knowing that they are dangerous,
 3  II,  23|          various shapes, but not knowing what they all are, and ignorant
 4  II,  24| speechless, not understanding or knowing even this-whether you are
 5  II,  26|        God, and as coming hither knowing all about past times, I
 6  II,  61|       there is neither profit in knowing, nor loss in not knowing?
 7  II,  61|         knowing, nor loss in not knowing? Leave these things to God,
 8  II,  74|          blind creature, and not knowing himself even, can in no
 9  II,  77|      ground its other parts, not knowing that thus he was giving
10  II,  77|     relieve us of our skins, not knowing that, as far as you assault
11 III,  21|       what occasion for the gods knowing and being acquainted with
12 III,  22|       teaching a science without knowing the rules of that which
13   V,   1|        The famous king Numa, not knowing how to avert evil portended
14   V,   7|          the mother of the gods, knowing the fate of the youth, and
15  VI,   5|     others who are debarred from knowing each other by seas, mountains,
16 VII,  43|         matters, and perhaps not knowing what a dancer is? And if
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