Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] excellence 21 excellences 1 excellency 3 excellent 34 excellently 3 excelling 3 excels 3 | Frequency [« »] 34 destruction 34 entirely 34 esteemed 34 excellent 34 figure 34 foretold 34 hold | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances excellent |
Book, Chapter
1 I, pref| it; thinking it much more excellent to investigate and know 2 I, pref| living, which is far more excellent, since to speak well belongs 3 I, 1 | desirable for all, with an excellent beginning, when, restoring 4 I, 7 | we owe that which is most excellent in us. Another brought us 5 I, 9 | things I do not compare with excellent men, but I judge him to 6 I, 10 | customary prayer is styled Most Excellent and Great? Is he not, from 7 I, 17 | marriage. Upon this the excellent and mighty Jupiter, being 8 I, 17 | horses, called in the most excellent physician AEsculapius for 9 I, 18 | the body? Can he be more excellent than Him who formed the 10 I, 19 | the one and only God. The excellent poet exclaims, that all 11 III, 8 | without reason does that most excellent poet say that we must try " 12 III, 11 | something else more sublime and excellent; nor does anything struggle 13 III, 12 | everything, leads us to that excellent and surpassing good, on 14 III, 18 | state, by preserving two excellent citizens, Cicero and Cato. 15 III, 20 | us for the production of excellent works. The heaven is nothing 16 IV, 3 | of us who is not called excellent father of the gods; so that 17 IV, 4 | by the Supreme God in an excellent condition), nevertheless 18 IV, 6 | before He commenced this excellent work of the world, begat 19 IV, 27 | him into the temple of the excellent and mighty Jupiter; or since 20 IV, 28 | superstitious man? For if it is an excellent thing to pray once, how 21 V, 6 | remained of the pious and excellent condition of the preceding 22 V, 11 | worse as the mind is more excellent than the body." Therefore 23 V, 12 | one of them should be an excellent man, of the highest integrity, 24 V, 12 | the estimation of all an excellent man, and most worthy of 25 V, 15 | virtues; no one, in short, is excellent, but he who has been good 26 V, 16 | with humility, is esteemed excellent and illustrious in the sight 27 V, 20 | is nothing among men more excellent than religion, and that 28 VI, 6 | they are taken from the excellent copies made by nature and 29 VI, 8 | without any error to the most excellent harbour of wisdom and virtue. 30 VI, 14 | mercy is a distinguished and excellent gift in man, and that is 31 VI, 18 | is the part of a wise and excellent man not to wish to remove 32 VI, 20 | given to man nothing more excellent than the mind, nothing is 33 VI, 20 | say that it is much more excellent and worthy of man to look 34 VII, 4 | man that which was most excellent, reason only. Therefore