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| Alphabetical [« »] penalties- 1 penalty 4 penitence 1 people 33 perchance 1 perfect 6 perfectly 2 | Frequency [« »] 33 her 33 life 33 others 33 people 33 sacred 33 way 33 while | Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus The apology IntraText - Concordances people |
Chapter
1 I | severities inflicted on our people in recently private judgments, 2 III | to think of it, that most people so blindly knock their heads 3 IV | Papian laws which compelled people to have children before 4 VI | debauch the manners of the people; which did not permit the 5 IX | homicide--I shall turn to the people generally. How many, think 6 XIV | not be fabricated among people professing a great respect 7 XVI | first put this notion into people's minds. In the fifth book 8 XVIII | for from themselves, as a people dear to God for their fathers' 9 XVIII | Now in ancient times the people we call Jews bare the name 10 XIX | the ancient history of his people, who either authenticates 11 XXI | they. Then, too, the common people have now some knowledge 12 XXI | faith. So it was that as a people they flourished greatly, 13 XXI | out of every nation, and people, and country, choose for 14 XXI | abroad a lie, and keep back a people tributary and submissive 15 XXII | even the ignorant common people make frequent use of them 16 XXIII | if they put dreams into people's minds by the power of 17 XXIII | a readier confidence to people making confessions against 18 XXV | transference to the avenging people by whom Greece the conqueror 19 XXV | how could religion make a people great who have owed their 20 XXV | advanced to greatness a people who, as we have put it, 21 XXVI | temple with gifts, and its people with treaties; and which 22 XXVIII| them. Then, too, among you, people far more readily swear a 23 XXX | faithful senate, a virtuous people, the world at rest, whatever, 24 XXXVII| themselves, or any single people, however great, inhabiting 25 XXXIX | to support and bury poor people, to supply the wants of 26 XXXIX | saying of Diogenes: "The people of Megara feast as though 27 XL | affliction with which the people are visited. If the Tiber 28 XL | rain-sacrifices; you enjoin on the people barefoot processions; you 29 XLII | can that be the case with people who are living among you, 30 XLVII | claims to faith; so that people might think Christians unworthy 31 XLVIII| from Gaius, the cry of the people will be to have him stoned; 32 XLIX | your power. The joy of the people in our trouble is therefore 33 L | will stand higher with the people if you sacrifice the Christians