Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   2|        place in the east? Has the sun himself, the chief of the
 2   I,   9| accustomed to bask himself in the sun, and thus to acquire dryness
 3   I,  11|           the hottest rays of the sun, is summer to be removed
 4   I,  29|    ordained that the fires of the sun should exist for the growth
 5   I,  29|         When yon believe that the sun is a deity, do you not ask
 6   I,  38|          added to the rays of the sun; why the moon, always uninjured
 7   I,  47|            it is clearer than the sun himself that He was more
 8   I,  53|     Saviour God; whom neither the sun himself, nor any stars,
 9   I,  53|         shrouded in darkness, the sun's fiery blaze was checked,
10  II,  12|      which the rising and setting sun shines; in Rome herself,
11  II,  19|          believed to be above the sun as well as all the stars,
12  II,  20|           nor by the sight of the sun, but let there be some counterfeit
13  II,  22|           be able to say what the sun is, the earth, seas, stars,
14  II,  52|        but that some say that the sun is their framer, and that,
15  II,  58|        light in the east? how the sun, too, by one and the same
16  II,  61|       causes of ills; whether the sun is larger than the earth,
17 III,  24|          the Deity not impart the sun's fertilizing warmth, and
18 III,  29|         others the year, some the sun. But if we are to believe
19 III,  30|     repeatedly asserted to be the sun, driving a winged chariot,
20 III,  33|         that Bacchus, Apollo, the Sun, are one deity, increased
21 III,  33|        For if it is true that the sun is also Bacchus and Apollo,
22 III,  35|          its parts. The moon, the sun, the earth, the ether, the
23  IV,   5|           look towards the rising sun, the north pole and the
24  IV,   5|         be regarded as behind the sun's back. But, again, if I
25  IV,  14|         as they relate, the first Sun is called the son of Jupiter,
26  IV,  22|       born the golden and blazing Sun; of Latona and the same,
27   V,  23|       extinguish the light of the sun and moon; nay more, that
28   V,  27|        lamps and torches when the sun is shining most brightly?
29   V,  42|          we mean and speak of the sun; but if Attis is the sun,
30   V,  42|          sun; but if Attis is the sun, as you reckon him and say,
31   V,  42|        name made to pass from the sun to a man, or from a man
32   V,  42|         man, or from a man to the sun? For if that name is derived
33   V,  42|           first instance from the sun, what, pray, has the golden
34   V,  42|        what, pray, has the golden sun done to you, that you should
35  VI,   4|       showers, or the rays of the sun; but in order that we may
36  VI,   4|   thoughts. And as the stars, the sun, the moon, while they wander
37  VI,  10|           all we men see that the sun is perfectly round by our
38  VI,  12|        the road, and avoiding the sun's rays and the dust; Liber
39  VI,  12|           king were to remove the Sun from his place before the
40  VI,  12|      migrate to the shrine of the Sun.-for both are made beardless
41  VI,  12|         place a little cap on the Sun's head, how will you be
42  VI,  12|         them, whether this is the Sun, or that Mercury, since
43 VII,  40|     facing the rays of the rising sun. Their words were trustworthy,
44 VII,  40|         statue turned towards the sun, the secrets were revealed,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License