Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  28|         than we who worship God the Father of all things, and demand
 2   I,  34|           source of all things, the Father of ages and of seasons.
 3   I,  34|             as you allege, has both father and mother, grandfathers,
 4   I,  36|       fishes? Is it Aesculapius and father Bacchus, the former born
 5   I,  41| consecrating shrines to him, honour father Liber, who was torn limb
 6   I,  41|           deprived of his virility? Father Romulus himself, who was
 7   I,  55|           them the blessings of the Father, which they dispensed in
 8  II,   9|           causes, to Aristotle, the father of the Peripatetics? he
 9  II,  16|          men, who claim God as your Father, and maintain that you are
10  II,  22|             who he is, or from what father in what regions he was born,
11  II,  35|             agree that there is one Father of all, who alone is immortal
12  II,  36|             and favour of God their Father. In the same way, then,
13  II,  45|           they have one origin, one father and head, they should shake
14  II,  47|           God is not the parent and father of souls, by what sire have
15  II,  62|           hindrance, as if to their father's abode; nor by that which
16  II,  65|         entrusted to Him by God the Father, the remote and more secret
17  II,  65|             For if you believe that father Bacchus can give a good
18  II,  68|            supplication was made to father Dis and Saturn with the
19  II,  70|           of fire, were begotten by father Jupiter, and born of a parent
20  II,  71|        Hecate. Who begot Picus, the father of Faunus and grandfather
21  II,  71|             Latinus? Aeneas'. Whose father was he? He was father of
22  II,  71|         Whose father was he? He was father of the founder of the town
23  II,  71|            the brother of Picus and father of the other and lesser
24  II,  74|             what its nature is: the Father Himself, the Governor and
25 III,  29|              begin duty, then, with father Janus, whom certain of you
26 III,  29|             town Janiculum, was the father of Forts, the son-in-law
27 III,  29|            posterity, to be born of father Coelus, the progenitor of
28 III,  30|             who, born of Saturn his father and Ops his mother, is reported
29 III,  30|            that he might escape his father's rage. But now, does not
30  IV,  14|             whom has Aether for his father; another, Coelus; the third,
31  IV,  14|             the heroic age, was the father of Ialysus; while the fifth
32  IV,  14|            she who slew her lustful father, Pallas.
33  IV,  16|             am Minerva, begotten of father Pallas, the whole band of
34  IV,  16|       surname being derived from my father." The second will cry on
35  IV,  16|             upon yourself even your father's passions, full of maddening
36  IV,  19|           That god was born of this father and of that mother, do you
37  IV,  20|            his mother, and from his father Saturn, Diespiter was born
38  IV,  21|           ruler of the heavens, the father of gods and men, who, by
39  IV,  22|         born a second time from his father's thigh; of him, again,
40  IV,  24|          Curetes? that he drove his father from the seat of power,
41  IV,  25|            of you, who relates that father Dis and queenly Juno were
42  IV,  26|         surpass in such matters his father's powers. He in nine nights
43  IV,  27|              Thetis after Achilles' father; Proserpina after Adonis;
44  IV,  28|             made civil war upon his father, and deprived him of the
45   V,   6|           she becomes pregnant; her father shuts her up, supposing
46   V,  10|         bellowing and imitating his father's thunderings, he reproduced
47   V,  21|            seemed too wicked that a father openly be joined as in marriage
48   V,  23|      therefore, to see Jupiter, the father of the gods, who ever controls
49   V,  28|          erects phalli in honour of father Bacchus, and the whole district
50   V,  32|       Proserpina was carried off by father Dis, does not say, as you
51   V,  35|           earth, and for Libera and father Dis the sinking and casting
52   V,  40|     agriculture to the dishonour of father Dis? Is it not a thousand
53   V,  42|           the sire of Phaethon, the father of this light and brightness,
54   V,  43|          ravishing of Proserpine by father Dis, wines scattered over
55  VI,   7|            was denied burial in his father land. You will learn also-although
56  VI,  21|           son sprung from Apollo, a father smooth and beardless, and
57  VI,  21|         uncertain which of them was father, which son, or rather whether
58 VII,  21|            is usually sacrificed to father Liber and Mercury, or if
59 VII,  43|             be first excited by the father, who had been the cause
60 VII,  43|            afterwards terrified the father by his own danger! But if
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