Book, Chapter
1 I, I | fades with the heat of the sun or exposure to rain, but
2 I, I | morning has come; since the sun at night returns to the
3 I, I | eighteen hours long, for the sun then withdraws into southern
4 I, XXVII | before the setting of the sun. Which, nevertheless, may
5 III, XXV | twenty-first moon, when the sun had set. That you are ignorant
6 III, XXVII | happened an eclipse of the sun, on the third day of May,
7 IV, VII | comparison wherewith the sun at noon-day might seem dark,
8 IV, IX | which was brighter than the sun, wrapped in fine linen,
9 V, XII | the rising of the summer sun. And as we walked we came
10 V, XII | the rising of the winter sun, and having soon brought
11 V, XII | the rays of the noontide sun. In this field were innumerable
12 V, XXI | night.’ As, therefore, the sun, coming forth from the midst
13 V, XXI | moon at the full, when the sun set in the evening, followed
14 V, XXI | equinox, to the end, that the sun may first make the day longer
15 V, XXI | inasmuch as first ‘the Sun of Righteousness, with healing
16 V, XXI | mind, when he said ‘The sun was exalted and the moon
17 V, XXI | after the rising of the sun at the equinox, and after
18 V, XXI | appertains to the succession of sun and moon, month and week,
19 V, XX III| comets appeared about the sun, to the great terror of
20 V, XX III| of them went before the sun in the morning at his rising,
21 V, XXIV | year 538, an eclipse of the sun came to pass on the 16th
22 V, XXIV | year 540, an eclipse of the sun came to pass on the 20th
23 V, XXIV | there was an eclipse of the sun on the 14th day of August
24 V, XXIV | that the whole orb of the sun seemed to be covered with
25 V, XXIV | January, an eclipse of the sun came to pass; afterwards,
26 V, XXIV | in like manner as was the sun a little while before.~In
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