Book, Paragraph
1 1, 1 | body ; their properties of excellence, and as located in their (
2 1, 45| that he is) the image of excellence; and should learn that,
3 1, 47| consist of this possible excellence,—this, I say,—that (such
4 1, 52| in himself) the model of excellence, has determined the measure,
5 1, 52| which is their supreme excellence, as says one of the poets48, (
6 1, 64| minds, that their faculty of excellence was a thing altogether different
7 1, 73| For, what his state of excellence shall be when he arrives
8 1, 73| about him such a faculty of excellence, that he knows, not only
9 1, 75| it will be shorn of its excellence. When however, it becomes
10 1, 75| wisdom, and every sort of excellence, when it has ceased to countenance
11 1, 75| counts upon (this) ./. excellence, it deigns not to draw near
12 1, 77| lives and remains; and the excellence which is of this is such,
13 1, 78| instead of the seed of excellence, sprung up within them;
14 3, 14| arrived at the life of excellence and of wisdom which has
15 3, 39| Image, filled with every excellence, -- the Divine Image, the
16 4, 6 | which eclipsed every human excellence! For, had He brought near
17 4, 16| on account of his great excellence, they called "the Just45."
18 5, 31| on account of his great excellence, -- was interrogated of
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