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[988a] both strong and noble, that a really nobler and juster respect than is in the combined repute and worship which came from foreigners will be paid to all these gods by the Greeks, who have the benefit of their various education, their prophecies from Delphi, and the whole system of worship under their laws. And let none of the Greeks ever be apprehensive that being mortals we should never have dealings with divine affairs1; they should rather be of the quite opposite opinion, that the divine is never either unintelligent or in any ignorance of


1 Cf. Plato, Laws, vii. 821 A.

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