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1 I, 4 | Christian was not at that time in the world, yet truth
2 I, 7 | needs have originated some time or other from one mouth;
3 I, 7 | It is, however, well that time reveals all things, as your
4 I, 7 | not been able up to this time to prove the report it set
5 I, 7 | although it has had so long a time to recommend it to our acceptance.
6 I, 7 | marriages. And up to the present time it is mere report which
7 I, 7 | forsooth, we have by this time ceased from the reiteration
8 I, 7 | them, if they are for the time concealed from you? For
9 I, 8 | and deprived for so long a time of her food? Come, even
10 I, 9 | vast scourges before that time fell on all the world, on
11 I, 10 | are gods and (at the same time) despise them, who worship
12 I, 10 | charge of perjury? By this time, indeed, there is an end
13 I, 14 | destitute of all authority from time, and weak enough from the
14 I, 16 | a presentiment about the time excites him, the periods
15 I, 17 | be it so; yet at the same time (it must not be forgotten,
16 I, 19 | Rhadamanthus, while at the same time you reject Aristides, who
17 II, 1 | course, nothing which some time or other had a beginning
18 II, 2 | latter having taken some time to consider, answered by
19 II, 3 | therefore, which at one time before its beginning had
20 II, 4 | celestial objects. In process of time their ambitious conceptions
21 II, 5 | law for the revolutions of time, and for directing the guidance
22 II, 6 | philosophers. But, at the same time, if you consider the character
23 II, 9 | perhaps he fled a second time as a fugitive from the battle.
24 II, 12 | CHARACTERISTICS. SATURN OR TIME WAS HUMAN. INCONSISTENCIES
25 II, 12 | course they required a long time for vigorous growth to attain
26 II, 12 | Jupiter was born in course of time, he was removed out of the
27 II, 12 | secured his safety for a time; but at length the son,
28 II, 12 | physiological representation of Time: (they think) that it is
29 II, 12 | things are destroyed by Time, that Coelus and Tetra were
30 II, 12 | It was either Saturn or Time. If it was Time, how could
31 II, 12 | Saturn or Time. If it was Time, how could it be Saturn?
32 II, 12 | If he, how could it be Time? For you cannot possibly
33 II, 12 | prevent your worshipping Time under its proper quality?
34 II, 12 | not in the character of Time? What is the meaning of
35 II, 12 | do you mean Saturn to be Time, because you say he is a
36 II, 12 | whilst portraying him as Time, do you on that account
37 II, 12 | that he is either divine or Time. In every page of your literature
38 II, 12 | one. I will linger some time longer over the case of
39 II, 13 | reflect that after that time no one was worthy of such
40 II, 13 | done in the very infancy of time are a valid claim for their
41 II, 13 | just even at that early time, Jupiter ought to have been "
42 II, 14 | of these animals at one time, and that with more earnest
43 II, 16 | THE ARTS CHANGEABLE FROM TIME TO TIME, AND SOME BECOME
44 II, 16 | CHANGEABLE FROM TIME TO TIME, AND SOME BECOME OBSOLETE.~
45 II, 16 | the skilful men of our own time be compared with these,
46 II, conc| empire, each in its proper time, as the Assyrians, the Medes,
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