Book, Paragraph

 1  II,  70|   temples you now enter with reverence, whose deity you suppliantly
 2 III,   2|    demands the homage of our reverence. For as we lay hold of the
 3 III,   3|  constrained expressly to do reverence to those who form the royal
 4 III,   3|     do not expressly do them reverence, yet feel that they are
 5 III,   3| their Lord, and share in the reverence shown to Him. Now it must
 6 III,   5|   let us suppose that you do reverence to a thousand, or rather
 7 III,   6|    may be right to share the reverence which we show to the king
 8 III,   6|      the others, to whom the reverence of antiquity dedicated magnificent
 9  IV,   6|    this only, not to do them reverence with fitting honours, but
10  IV,  35|     gods, and most worthy of reverence; and, shameful to say, Venus,
11  IV,  35| brought forward, without any reverence for His name and majesty,
12   V,  22| sacredness in his parent, no reverence for her, no shrinking even
13   V,  30|     pretence of showing them reverence, heap up in so doing more
14 VII,   9|   your games with too little reverence and care? did I drag forward
15 VII,  13|    one, and to be yielded to reverence for a greater being, is
16 VII,  18|      do them honour and show reverence for them, what does it matter,
17 VII,  30| sweet smells, which show our reverence. And what greater insult
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