Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
against 161
agamemnon 1
agathocles 2
age 65
aged 4
agency 1
ages 26
Frequency    [«  »]
66 need
66 virtues
66 wonderful
65 age
65 follows
65 perfect
65 placed
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
The divine institutes

IntraText - Concordances

age

                                              bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter                              grey = Comment text
1 I, 1 | distinction either of sex or of age, to heavenly pasture. For 2 I, 6 | who alone was and is from age to age."~Also another Sibyl, 3 I, 6 | alone was and is from age to age."~Also another Sibyl, whoever 4 I, 11| his friends, and when his age was almost spent, he changed 5 I, 11| related to have had the golden age, because in his reign there 6 I, 11| a just government and an age of piety? But when, on the 7 I, 13| That was the storied age of gold,~So peacefully, 8 I, 13| place:--~"Restorer of the age of gold,~In lands where 9 I, 17| in that dress and of that age at which death arrested 10 I, 18| disease, or is lessened by old age itself, and altogether fails? 11 I, 20| corruptors, and at that age which, through its simplicity 12 I, 21| and innocent lives, at an age which is especially pleasing 13 I, 21| shields now putrid with age? When they carry these, 14 I, 22| gods: the one through their age, the others through folly, 15 I, 22| which of them was prior in age admits of doubt, since Latinus 16 II, 4 | when houses fall through age, and when, consumed by conflagration, 17 II, 4 | for he lived even to old age, and handed down the kingdom 18 II, 4 | life, and worn out by old age. Moreover, he was fortunate 19 II, 14| wickedness of the former age, that the length of life 20 II, 14| gradually diminished the age of man by each successive 21 III, 6 | suddenly arose, the old age, as it were, of philosophy, 22 III, 11| is lessened by advance of age, and does not fall to the 23 III, 14| have been worn out by old age and death before they have 24 III, 16| was the first, and his age was recent. Where, then, 25 III, 17| arrangement or discrimination of age; but that some arrived at 26 III, 17| that some arrived at old age, while others were carried 27 III, 25| condition, and sex, and age. Therefore it is a very 28 IV, 1 | ERROR WAS SPREAD OVER EVERY AGE, AND OF THE SEVEN WISE MEN 29 IV, 1 | that, by the folly of one age embracing various superstitions, 30 IV, 1 | wretched and calamitous age, in which through the whole 31 IV, 12| the Ancient of days, whose age and origin cannot be comprehended; 32 IV, 12| affairs of men, a golden age (as the poets call it), 33 V, 1 | the learned men of this age, to whom his writings have 34 V, 6 | and took away that golden age of justice, and compelled 35 V, 6 | condition of the preceding age; but justice being banished, 36 V, 6 | was on the earth in the age which they call "golden," 37 V, 6 | who changed the golden age. But the change of the age 38 V, 6 | age. But the change of the age and the expulsion of justice 39 V, 6 | and this is, the golden age, which was first corrupted 40 V, 7 | VIRTUES AND VICES OF THAT AGE.~But God, as a most indulgent 41 V, 7 | messenger to bring back that old age, and justice which had been 42 V, 7 | cannot be said that a golden age exists; because God has 43 V, 8 | hearts, and that golden age will at once return to you, 44 V, 13| improvident through their age, the mature and aged doubtless 45 V, 13| sun, and each sex, every age, and nation, and country, 46 V, 13| the weak sex and fragile age endure to be lacerated in 47 VI, 3 | those of each sex, every age and race, into this heavenly 48 VI, 5 | lusts be repressed, every age and sex will retain its 49 VI, 19| is, in order that tender age may be formed by a severer 50 VI, 19| towards those of our own age. It is impious, because 51 VI, 19| against their equals in age: hence disagreements, hence 52 VI, 20| does not become at their age to sin. What else does the 53 VII, 2 | WISDOM, AND OF THE GOLDEN AGE.~Now let us instruct those 54 VII, 2 | God, that this unrighteous age, having run the course of 55 VII, 2 | peaceful, in short, golden age, as the poets call it, should 56 VII, 12| or lessened according to age. The soul is always in its 57 VII, 12| learning and hearing; and old age does not lessen wisdom, 58 VII, 12| but increases it, if the age of youth has been passed 59 VII, 12| virtue; and if excessive old age shall have enfeebled the 60 VII, 12| bodies worn out with old age and death, and gain admission 61 VII, 14| so now from this earthly age is formed a perfect man, 62 VII, 14| as it were the last old age of the wearied and wasting 63 VII, 15| This was its first old age, when, lacerated by civil 64 VII, 15| except that death follow old age? And that it will so come 65 VII, 27| his years incline to old age, sees to be the approach


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL