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Alphabetical [« »] happier 1 happiness 18 happipiness 1 happy 56 harass 9 harassed 16 harasser 1 | Frequency [« »] 57 strength 56 fall 56 force 56 happy 56 pain 56 religious 56 saw | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances happy |
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1 I, 1 | God. For when that most happy day had shone upon the world, 2 I, 7 | only, what solitude can be happy? As though we, in asserting 3 II, 7 | anything from the earth, or happy if they are in want of anything, 4 III, 8 | used to regard him as most happy, because he was without 5 III, 8 | good cannot make any one happy, unless it shall be always 6 III, 8 | all will begin to appear happy who shall have the knowledge 7 III, 8 | learned to mix poisons, is as happy as he who has learned to 8 III, 11| men. But if it cannot be happy because its power and nature 9 III, 12| therefore, virtue is not happy by itself, since its whole 10 III, 12| that no one can be made happy without virtue. Therefore, 11 III, 12| the reward of virtue is a happy life, if virtue, as it is 12 III, 12| is rightly said, makes a happy life. Virtue, therefore, 13 III, 12| account, but on account of a happy life, which necessarily 14 III, 12| corporeal life cannot be happy, because it is subjected 15 III, 12| body. Epicurus calls God happy and incorruptible, because 16 III, 12| Nor can anything be judged happy in other respects, unless 17 III, 12| Immortality therefore is alone happy, because it can neither 18 III, 12| is produced. Therefore a happy life, which philosophers 19 III, 12| not that he should then be happy, when he lives in the body, 20 III, 12| one thing alone can we be happy in this life, if we appear 21 III, 12| therefore which makes men happy cannot exist, unless it 22 III, 13| discuss the subject of a happy life. There remains that 23 III, 13| not able to render a man happy, it remains that the whole 24 III, 13| tends to promote a good and happy life? Or if any account 25 III, 17| said that the wise man is happy even under tortures. The 26 III, 17| saw that the wicked were happy; that they were exalted 27 III, 27| which can alone produce a happy life. Nothing can be said 28 III, 27| possible for any one to be happy in the hands of the executioners? 29 III, 27| man, he says, is always happy; and even when shut up in 30 III, 27| Epicurus? The wise man is happy even when be is tortured. 31 III, 27| The wise man therefore is happy under tortures; but when 32 III, 27| pain will render him most happy. For it is God alone who 33 III, 30| who wishes to be wise and happy hear the voice of God, learn 34 IV, 16| For if He had been most happy on the earth, and had reigned 35 V, 8 | people alone perform. How happy and how golden would be 36 V, 10| often see their despisers happy, and their worshippers in 37 V, 11| death alone could make them happy, and as though tortures 38 V, 22| rich, and powerful, and happy? and why do they enjoy honours 39 V, 23| unjust to become powerful, happy, and rich, and, on the other 40 VI, 1 | and the whole course of a happy life consists, since we 41 VI, 2 | a parricide, he will he happy and prosperous. Him they 42 VI, 17| beyond death itself. But a happy and unconquered patience 43 VI, 20| contribute in no respect to a happy life, but even inflict the 44 VII | BOOK VII. OF A HAPPY LIFE.~ 45 VII, 2 | righteous being recalled to a happy life, a quiet, tranquil, 46 VII, 5 | befitting that man should be happy, as though closely connected 47 VII, 5 | discuss the subject of a happy life, these things are to 48 VII, 5 | man must be both wise and happy without any evil; but this 49 VII, 11| position, that they who are happy in this life, pertaining 50 VII, 11| are about to be always happy, that since they have already 51 VII, 15| highest degree, may be judged happy and almost golden in comparison 52 VII, 20| incapable of suffering, and happy, return to the heavenly 53 VII, 20| origin, or are borne to some happy plains, where they may enjoy 54 VII, 22| they may be able to pass a happy life whose death has been 55 VII, 22| can thought conceive~That happy souls this realm would leave,~ 56 VII, 27| if we wish to be wise and happy, not only must those sayings