Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   1|              to ruin, that the human race has been visited with ills
 2   I,   3|         pestilence consume the human race:-ransack the records of
 3   I,   4|                4. When was the human race destroyed by a flood? was
 4   I,   8|        bodies, and weakens the human race? What if-and this seems
 5   I,   8|           the overthrow of the human race, its destruction, ruin,
 6   I,  14|              and how could the human race have existed even to this
 7   I,  24|       religions. Justly is the human race afflicted by so many pressing
 8   I,  29|             hearing of all the human race! Are we therefore charged
 9   I,  32| acknowledging that there is a divine race of beings, doubt about those
10   I,  34|          common consent of the human race, the omnipotent God is regarded
11   I,  38|           and salutary for the human race; who has shown us what God
12   I,  43|           silence; or in the chariot race to weaken, urge on, or retard
13   I,  45|               whose very sight, that race of demons which took possession
14   I,  53|              terrify the whole human race, were able to know or to
15   I,  54|           and that incredulous human race; but if the matter were
16   I,  60|           and under the guise of our race He imprisoned His power,
17  II,  17|             say, and excel the whole race of dumb animals in understanding.
18  II,  18|           which it is fitting that a race should have indeed which
19  II,  19|             the earth, nor would any race of men be found which would
20  II,  21|              empty void, -one of the race of Plato, namely, or Pythagoras,
21  II,  42|        beings of a sacred and august race should here practise singing
22  II,  45|          wretched and pitiable human race endures with agony caused
23  II,  48|          they belong to no patrician race, but have sprung from insignificant
24  II,  49|            is fitting that the human race should be rated and weighed,
25  II,  50|            are good men in the human race; and perhaps, if we compare
26  II,  52|             have fashioned the human race, and connected it with things
27  II,  54|         dangers with which the human race is every moment distressed
28  II,  63|        number or not since the human race began to be on the earth;
29  II,  71|            sprung from one stock and race. It is clear, then, that
30  II,  74|              that the Saviour of our race came not lately, but to-day.
31  II,  75|         indeed, after that the human race, becoming feebler, weaker,
32 III,   3|           vouch, if they are a royal race, and spring from the Supreme
33 III,   9|     offspring, and that, as each new race springs up, a substitution,
34 III,  22|               they surpass the whole race of earth by their length
35 III,  36|            put away almost the whole race of deities with a pretence
36 III,  42|           existence, and that such a race takes rank among the celestial
37  IV,  17|             conception of so great a race be shown to us. Show us
38  IV,  19|             By the laws of the human race, and the associations of
39  IV,  19|              meanness of our earthly race? Or, while you think that
40  IV,  24|         which, as you say, the human race has long been afflicted,
41  IV,  27|           should utterly destroy the race of men; or if they are true
42  IV,  28|          which belongs to a fleeting race, and to the frailty of earth.
43  IV,  28|              are a human and earthly race to whom they apply; or if
44  IV,  35|             Venus, the mother of the race of Mars, and parent of the
45  IV,  36|            come with which the human race is deluged and overwhelmed
46   V,   8|            rain swept away the whole race of men? It is through man,
47   V,   8|           has left in writing on the race of the Roman people, shows
48   V,  10|           will perhaps say the human race shuns and execrates such
49   V,  10|          wonderful. For as the human race is said by you to have sprung
50   V,  20|              initiated, and all that race, were it not that the name
51   V,  25|             from whom also flows the race of Eumolpidae, and from
52   V,  26|            in his songs to the human race throughout all ages:- "With
53  VI,   2|           For it belongs to a mortal race and human weakness to act
54  VI,   7|         whose son Aulus was, of what race and nation, how he was bereft
55  VI,  21|        whether they were of the same race and family. Now, when all
56  VI,  26|           account of which the human race was to be benumbed for ever,
57 VII,  12|               they suffer an unhappy race to be involved in so many
58 VII,  15|          directed to a more powerful race, we reply. Tell, us, you
59 VII,  15|              for burning the unhappy race of animals funeral pyres,
60 VII,  19|           persuades himself that the race of the gods is so distinguished
61 VII,  41|        splendour and majesty of this race. For, first, who is there
62 VII,  46|            what that was, or to what race of beings it should be referred,
63 VII,  49|            renown and dignity of the race with irresistible power.
64 VII,  51|             be the bane of the human race, subjugated the guiltless
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