Book, Chapter

 1    I,   6, p.   28|      abstain from eating certain beasts, neither do we. For instance,
 2    I,   6, p.   38|          stone and daemons, wild beasts that feed on human flesh,
 3    I,   6, p.   39|          men who lived like wild beasts, now converted by the divine
 4    I,   6, p.   41|        by the sacrifice of slain beasts, of incense and fire and
 5    I,  10, p.   55|          that of the unreasoning beasts, providing a life instead
 6    I,  10, p.   56|        creeping things, and wild beasts of the earth after their
 7   II,   3, p.   89|          way differing from wild beasts to a holy, mild, and social
 8  III,   2, p.  111|        animals, (d) and the wild beasts mentioned in the passage,
 9  III,   2, p.  111|        being by nature like wild beasts; and he says that one arising
10  III,   3, p.  120|          were once like (c) wild beasts, as well as learned Greeks,
11  III,   3, p.  120|         slaughter of unreasoning beasts, or by blood, or fire, or
12  III,   5, p.  132|         fire and sword, and wild beasts. We must greet them all
13   IV,   6, p.  175|       the life of the irrational beasts. Then surely the All-Good,
14   IV,   6, p.  175|          might not be like brute beasts without rulers and guardians,
15   IV,   9, p.  180|         of birds and four-footed beasts and creeping things." [[
16   IV,  10, p.  181|         their dearest, like wild beasts that devour the raw flesh
17    V, Int, p.  223|         blood more than any wild beasts, and, could be convicted
18    V, Int, p.  225|          slaughter of irrational beasts, but also in the destruction
19    V, Int, p.  229|        birds, on goats and other beasts, ay, even on the movements
20    V, Int, p.  229|   lifeless things, or irrational beasts, nor even in rational beings,
21   VI,  13, p.   14|         and he was with the wild beasts." Or the mountains again
22  VII,   2, p.   79|      attack from wild and savage beasts. ~Such is the character
23  VII,   3, p.   91|          to the animals and wild beasts becoming tame and laying
24 VIII, Int, p.   97|       were like wild and untamed beasts. They knew nothing of cities,
25 VIII, Int, p.   97|         to birds and four-footed beasts and creeping things."  ~
26 VIII,   1, p.  113|          as from a trap for wild beasts. The kneeling and the being
27 VIII,   5, p.  148|     troubles and persecutions on beasts or reptiles as their gods,
28   IX,   7, p.  165|         tells us, "with the wild beasts." These were the same, as
29   IX,   7, p.  169| Temptation, He was with the wild beasts, we are not told what they
30   IX,   7, p.  169|       disguised way the kinds of beasts, viz.: "Thou shalt (c) step
31   IX,   7, p.  169|        the kingliest of the wild beasts of the spirit, the lion
32    X,   1, p.  192|       flesh of thy saints to the beasts of the fields." The first
33    X,   1, p.  193|       flesh of thy saints to the beasts of the land, their (d) blood
34    X,   8, p.  227|        well be called after evil beasts, be it savage (b) bulls,
35    X,   8, p.  229|         voracious birds and wild beasts, and knew that almost at
36    X,   8, p.  229|       also the wild and dreadful beasts of Tartarus, of which Isaiah
37    X,   8, p.  232|      reckoned as one of the wild beasts there, called a lion, opening
38   XV           236|       the prophet again saw four beasts, which he interpreted to
39   XV           237|          under the forms of wild beasts, according to the ideals
40   XV           237|       the similitude of the four beasts. I consider, therefore,
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