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Alphabetical [« »] spat 1 speak 122 speaking 34 speaks 51 specially 2 spectacle 3 spectacles 5 | Frequency [« »] 51 perhaps 51 sacrifice 51 sent 51 speaks 50 authority 50 consists 50 plain | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances speaks |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 5 | Tyndarus and Hercules,--speaks of the true and great God 2 I, 5 | approach the truth, who thus speaks respecting the highest God, 3 I, 5 | her offspring." Chrysippus speaks of God as a natural power 4 I, 5 | divine necessity. Zeno also speaks of Him as a divine and natural 5 I, 6 | concerning whom Chrysippus speaks in that book which he composed 6 I, 7 | mention above, not only speaks of God as "without a mother," 7 I, 11| life, at the close thus speaks: Then Jupiter, when he had 8 I, 14| the Erythraean Sibyl, who speaks almost the same things, 9 I, 18| In Ennius Africanus thus speaks: "If it is permitted any 10 I, 20| which circumstance the pact speaks of the immoveable stone 11 I, 21| goat Germanicus Caesar thus speaks, in his poem translated 12 I, 21| nourished Jupiter; and he speaks to this purport: Because 13 II, 4 | which account Priapus thus speaks in Horace:~"Formerly I was 14 II, 5 | the Stoic Lucilius thus speaks in Cicero: "This regularity, 15 II, 5 | of the gods." And he thus speaks a little before: "It remains," 16 II, 7 | short, in Cicero, Cotta thus speaks to Lucilius: "You know, 17 II, 7 | Propertius the elegiac poet thus speaks:--~"The trumpet used to 18 II, 9 | nature of the gods, thus speaks: "First of all, therefore, 19 II, 15| describe them. Hesiod thus speaks:--~"These are the demons 20 III, 14| wisdom as a god,--for thus he speaks:--~"No one, I think, who 21 III, 14| out wisdom. For thus he speaks:--~"Will it not be right 22 III, 17| multitude to himself, he speaks that which is specially 23 III, 17| respecting his consulship, he speaks to the same purport as Lucretius:--~" 24 III, 27| even in tortures. Epicurus speaks much more strongly. The 25 IV, 8 | writer of sacred hymns, thus speaks in the thirty-second Psalm: " 26 IV, 11| Jews were restored, thus speaks: They rebelled against Thee, 27 IV, 11| serve me" Isaiah also thus speaks: "I come to gather all nations 28 IV, 11| asunder with a saw, thus speaks: "Hear, O heaven; and give 29 IV, 12| occurrence. Thus Solomon speaks: "The womb of a virgin was 30 IV, 13| the prophet Jeremiah thus speaks: "This is our God, and there 31 IV, 13| Moses also, in Numbers, thus speaks: "There shall arise a star 32 IV, 13| namely him of whom the Sibyl speaks, "A pure blossom shall spring 33 IV, 15| already mentioned, thus speaks:--~"He shall still the winds 34 IV, 16| Of the first David thus speaks in the seventy-first Psalm: " 35 IV, 18| to the cross, David thus speaks in the sixty-eighth Psalm: " 36 IV, 20| Jeremiah testifies when he speaks such things: "Behold, the 37 IV, 26| nature; but as long as it speaks false things it is not rightly 38 IV, 28| nature of the gods he thus speaks: "For not only philosophers, 39 IV, 29| besides Thee." And he also speaks to the same purport in another 40 V, 3 | can be believed when he speaks concerning himself?, but 41 V, 5 | swords,"~as Germanicus Caesar speaks in his poem translated from 42 V, 20| matter itself and the truth speaks. Why then do they rage, 43 VI, 5 | action. Horace therefore speaks somewhat better: "Virtue 44 VI, 5 | free from folly." But he speaks improperly, because he defined 45 VI, 9 | life-giving precepts; he speaks, who, in discussing heavenly 46 VI, 11| employed at all? For thus he speaks: "Bounty, which proceeds 47 VI, 24| own conscience? And Tully speaks in a manner no less remarkable 48 VII, 5 | tongue is loosened so that he speaks plainly, and he ceases to 49 VII, 23| says better, whom Cicero speaks of as supporting the portico 50 VII, 23| divine things. The Sibyl thus speaks:--~"For the whole race of 51 VII, 24| But the Erythraean thus speaks:--~"But wolves shall not