IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] mortally 1 mortals 15 most 120 mother 79 mother-who 1 mothers 12 moths 1 | Frequency [« »] 80 human 79 another 79 deity 79 mother 78 set 78 way 77 body | Arnobius Seven Books against the Heathen Concordances mother |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 33| aye, stamped almost in his mother's womb even, in whom is 2 I, 34| allege, has both father and mother, grandfathers, grandmothers, 3 I, 34| conceived in the womb of his mother, being completely formed 4 I, 36| dashed by lightning from his mother's womb? Is it Mercury, son 5 I, 36| were companions of their mother's wanderings, and who were 6 I, 41| the temples of the Great Mother, that Phrygian Atys who 7 II, 52| wise say that the earth is mother of men, that others join 8 II, 70| begotten, and received in his mother's womb the shape and outline 9 II, 73| not the sacred rites of mother Ceres, which were adopted 10 III, 26| Mars himself, and the fair mother of the Desires; to one of 11 III, 30| Saturn his father and Ops his mother, is reported to have been 12 III, 32| that the earth is the Great Mother, because it provides all 13 III, 32| gods; nor, in fine, can the mother of the gods herself, whom 14 III, 41| Manes, and therefore the mother of the Lares was named Mania; 15 IV, 14| also Jupiter's son, and the mother who bore him Hyperiona; 16 IV, 14| third was born of Maia, his mother, and the third Jove; the 17 IV, 14| whom is no virgin but the mother of Apollo by Vulcan; the 18 IV, 16| being a wife, and so often a mother, have lost the sanctity 19 IV, 16| Coryphasia, either to mark her mother, or because she sprung forth 20 IV, 19| this father and of that mother, do you not feel in your 21 IV, 20| From Ops, you say, his mother, and from his father Saturn, 22 IV, 22| begotten. Of Hyperiona, as his mother, you say, and Jupiter, who 23 IV, 26| make Clitor's daughter the mother of Myrmidon, in Thessaly? 24 IV, 26| virginal title, and to bear a mother's burden. Moreover, not 25 IV, 27| Proserpina after Adonis; her mother, Ceres, after some rustic 26 IV, 27| Mars; Venus herself, the mother of Aeneas, and founder of 27 IV, 29| Venus; to whom the great mother was bound in marriage; what 28 IV, 35| shameful to say, Venus, the mother of the race of Mars, and 29 IV, 35| a vile harlot. The Great Mother, too, adorned with her sacred 30 V, 5| the birth of the Great Mother of the gods, and the origin 31 V, 5| men; from which this Great Mother, too, as she is called, 32 V, 5| month, being named from his mother rock. In him there had been 33 V, 6| she is kept alive by the mother of the gods with apples, 34 V, 6| the name Attis. Him the mother of the gods loved exceedingly, 35 V, 7| their marriage joys. But the mother of the gods, knowing the 36 V, 7| life flies; but the Great Mother of the gods gathers the 37 V, 7| into purple violets. The mother of the gods sheds tears 38 V, 8| threw, was produced the mother of the gods. What do you 39 V, 8| heavenly powers? Did the mother of the gods, then, not exist 40 V, 8| to be believed, the Great Mother, too, must be said to have 41 V, 8| the deities is not their mother, but their daughter; nay, 42 V, 9| having bemired the Great Mother of the gods with the filth 43 V, 9| Jupiter himself? While the mother of the gods was then sleeping 44 V, 9| detestable passion upon his mother? and could he not be turned 45 V, 9| trying how soundly his mother slept, and what she would 46 V, 9| craft, did he assail his mother with violence, and begin 47 V, 9| execrable lust after his mother? 48 V, 10| And why, then, did his mother resist with the greatest 49 V, 10| cautious and foreseeing mother of the gods, who, that she 50 V, 13| apples who had been made a mother by an apple. After her offspring 51 V, 13| and fled from. The Great Mother loved him-if as a grandmother 52 V, 13| what Midas dreaded? The Mother entered bearing the very 53 V, 14| dead. Say, again, did the mother of the gods, then, with 54 V, 16| into the sanctuary of the mother of the gods? Is it not in 55 V, 16| they not mark this, how the Mother adorned with early flowers 56 V, 16| which the tower-bearing Mother, along with the weeping 57 V, 17| up in the temple of the Mother of the gods next, like some 58 V, 20| Diespiter, burning after his mother Ceres with evil passions 59 V, 20| district to be Jupiter's mother, and yet not daring to seek 60 V, 20| rob of her chastity his mother, who feared nothing of the 61 V, 20| known and discovered. His mother burns, foams, gasps, boils 62 V, 21| the rage of his violated mother. He pours forth prayers, 63 V, 21| tegmine. Approaching his mother sadly and with downcast 64 V, 21| Jupiter, but not as her mother was, for she bore a daughter 65 V, 22| bearable. Did he lust after his mother also, after his daughter 66 V, 23| and bringing them to his mother, still hot with rage, as 67 V, 32| says Jupiter lay with his mother, does not mean the incestuous 68 V, 37| have intercourse with his mother Ceres: as was explained 69 V, 39| the sanctuary of the Great Mother, is it not in imitation 70 VI, 11| Pessinus a flint instead of the mother of the gods; the Romans 71 VI, 25| a soldier's helmet; the mother of the gods, with her timbrel; 72 VII, 22| established on no solid basis? To mother Earth, they say, is sacrificed 73 VII, 22| if because the Earth is a mother she is in like manner to 74 VII, 26| Etruria, the parent and mother of superstition, acquainted 75 VII, 32| says my opponent, of the mother of the gods is to-day. Do 76 VII, 33| passionate impulses? Is the Great Mother rendered more calm, more 77 VII, 49| 49. But the Great Mother, also, says my opponent, 78 VII, 50| colour and dark body, was the mother of the gods? or who, again, 79 VII, 50| where was the Phrygian mother at the time when the commonwealth