109-blasp | blast-detac | detai-goat | godde-loyal | lucan-potte | pound-since | sinfu-vows | vulca-zoolo
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1 I, 48(4626)| have lived 105, or even 109 years. He was held in high
2 I, 22(4383)| Joshua died at the age of 110 years. Josh. xxiv. 29.~
3 I, 7(4293) | four-in-hand, Virg. G. iii. 113: “First to the chariot,
4 I, 48(4619)| Æmilius Scaurus, consul b.c. 115. She fell ill during the
5 II, 6(4725) | and Antoninus Pius, a.d. 117–161. Only two fragments
6 I, 1(4256) | Pers. Sat. iii. 118.~
7 II, 7(4748) | drowned in the Nile. a.d. 122. The emperor’s grief was
8 II, 3(4688) | dates, ranging between a.d. 126 and a.d. 173, are assigned
9 I, 42(4592)| about b.c. 213, died b.c. 129. He was the determined opponent
10 II, 11(4762)| Born at Pergamum a.d. 130, died probably in the year
11 I, 1(4255) | Hor. Ars Poet. 139.~
12 I, 43(4595)| round on all sides. b.c. 146.~
13 I, 48(4623)| Born b.c. 234, died b.c. 149. He was the great-grandfather
14 I, 21(4374)| Jerome derives Gilgal from הָלנָ&#
15 II, 15(4786)| The Hebrew verb לוקּ, to emit
16 I, 3(4262) | Marcion lived about a.d. 150, and was co-temporary with
17 II, 15(4786)| Hebrew verb לוקּ, to emit rays, is
18 II, 6(4725) | Antoninus Pius, a.d. 117–161. Only two fragments remain
19 I, 49(4641)| Sempronius Gracchus, censor b.c. 169. The people erected a statue
20 II, 36(4935)| Virgil Æn. iv. 172.~
21 II, 3(4688) | between a.d. 126 and a.d. 173, are assigned to the origin
22 II, 4(4711) | the Ancient Monuments, p. 178, and Cheyne’s Isaiah. The
23 II, 11(4762)| died probably in the year 200. His writings are considered
24 I, 41(4579)| forthwith followed her. b.c. 204.~
25 II, 14(4779)| Ptolemy Philopator (b.c. 222–205).~
26 I, 48(4636)| Chrysippus (b.c. 280–207) the Stoic philosopher,
27 I, 42(4592)| Born about b.c. 213, died b.c. 129. He was the
28 I, 42(4591)| Alexandria (died about a.d. 220) in his Stromata (i.e. literally,
29 I, 23(4397)| Christianity,” pop. ed., p. 221.~
30 II, 14(4779)| Ptolemy Philopator (b.c. 222–205).~
31 I, 44(4598)| of an ambassador, and in 228 she obtained peace at the
32 I, 44(4598)| death of her husband, b.c. 231. War was declared against
33 I, 48(4623)| Born b.c. 234, died b.c. 149. He was the
34 II, 14(4771)| Neanthes lived about b.c. 241. He was a voluminous writer,
35 I, 3(4266) | Mayor’s note on Juvenal x. 249.~
36 II, 3(4689) | went to Rome (about a.d. 250) and there co-operated with
37 I, 13 | πρόσεδρον τῷ Κυρί& 251· ἀπερισπάστως́&#
38 I, 46(4604)| Carthaginian fleet near Mylæ, 260 b.c.~
39 II, 11(4764)| Fabricius. He was censor b.c. 272.~
40 II, 11(4763)| Fabricius was censor in b.c. 275, and devoted himself to
41 I, 48(4635)| well-constituted body. He died b.c. 277 in the 53rd year of his
42 I, 48(4636)| Chrysippus (b.c. 280–207) the Stoic philosopher,
43 I, 41(4582)| town. At his death (b.c. 282) they rose and gained possession
44 I, 42(4591)| Ptolemy Sorer (b.c. 323–285), by whom he was said to
45 I, 47(4610)| own writings. He died b.c. 287, after being President of
46 II, 11(4764)| Curius Dentatus, Consul b.c. 290 with P. Cornelius Rufinus
47 I, 42(4587)| who probably lived in the 2nd century after Christ, in
48 I, 46(4609)| death of her husband in 311, rejected the proposals
49 I, 41(4574)| Virg. Æn i. 317.~
50 II, 9(4755) | Flourished about b.c. 320. Though heir to a large
51 I, 48(4625)| b.c. 385–322.~
52 I, 49(4646)| capture of the city in b.c. 335 was broken into and pillaged
53 I, 48(4624)| b.c. 382–336.~
54 I, 4(4271) | translation), second ed., p. 337 sq.~
55 I, 42(4585)| of the Academy (b.c. 347–339). His works are all lost.~
56 I, 4(4271) | Epicurus (b.c. 342–270), though a disciple
57 I, 3 | will drag them out from p. 348 his books like snakes from
58 I, 5 | pronounced on procreation, p. 349 4276 “Be fruitful, and
59 I, 7 | the spreading poison, p. 351 threw away the cloak which
60 I, 10 | she is content to dwell p. 353 with him, let him not leave
61 I, 11 | virginity? In the next p. 354 place, how are we to understand
62 I, 11 | and Pharaoh’s meat?~p. 355
63 I, 12 | in order to worship Me p. 356 have renounced the condition
64 I, 13 | with lust, and cannot be p. 358 bridled, and he must do
65 I, 14 | appears from this—that p. 359 a person twice married 4345
66 I, 16 | his doings, and have p. 360 put on the new man, which
67 I, 19 | that when Jacob did this p. 361 thing he was among the Assyrians,
68 I, 21 | circumcised them with a stone p. 362 knife, that what in the
69 I, 22 | be as a fruitful vine, p. 363 in the innermost parts of
70 I, 24 | good that a millstone p. 364 were hanged about our neck,
71 I, 25 | that at the time these p. 365 things were spoken of Noah,
72 I, 27 | old transgression p. 367 by the 4434 procreation
73 I, 28 | worthy of love, her love p. 368 is compared to the grave,
74 I, 30 | Gospel give forth their frap. 369 grance. Whence the Apostle
75 I, 33 | widow, and past pleasp. 371 ures and the exposure of
76 I, 34 | sexual intercourse. Now a p. 372 priest must always offer
77 I, 35 | having his children in p. 373 subjection with all chastity.”
78 I, 36 | other men, Paul? Why are p. 374 you distinguished from the
79 I, 37 | flesh is enmity against p. 375 God; for it is not subject
80 I, 39 | house, that of Philip p. 377 the Evangelist, produced
81 I, 40 | reconcile the spotless Lamb. p. 379 It would be endless work
82 I, 41 | they suppose, the world p. 380 revolves. It is a proof
83 I, 49 | going out used to tie p. 386 his wife’s garter upon his
84 II, Int | p. 387 Jerome answers the second,
85 II, 2 | you may not sin, and p. 388 that you may know that so
86 II, 4 | his former rank. And p. 391 Josiah, a holy man, 4706
87 II, 5 | creatures were created by p. 392 God for nothing. But what
88 II, 7 | recently become acquainted, p. 394 eat flesh half raw. Moreover
89 II, 8 | passion bordering on p. 395 insanity. To gratify this
90 II, 14 | rigidly self-restrained p. 398 that they support themselves
91 II, 15 | them because they were p. 399 flesh, He by the deluge
92 II, 15 | Horeb, and heard from Him p. 400 the words, “What doest thou
93 II, 16 | laboureth laboureth for p. 401 himself, and he is eager
94 II, 17 | he did dine the day prep. 402 vious, and was hungry next
95 II, 18 | feet grew not hard: the p. 403 food in the mouths of all
96 II, 22 | For even as we have p. 405 many members in one body,
97 II, 23 | detail of the graces of p. 406 charity, he added: 4858 “
98 II, 24 | and fight, that at last p. 407 we may reach the haven,
99 II, 25 | for ye know not the p. 408 day, nor the hour.” If at
100 II, 28 | come? A difference of p. 410 name is meaningless where
101 II, 30 | I am again in travail p. 411 until Christ be formed in
102 II, 31 | crowned. My duty is to p. 412 resist the frenzy of the
103 II, 33 | lose it, did no wrong, p. 413 and the caution of him who
104 II, 34 | have their clothing of p. 414 wrought gold, blue, scarlet,
105 II, 36 | adulterers into acknowledged p. 415 husbands. 4934 It was not
106 II, 38 | height in Hebrew. Lose p. 416 not the excellence your
107 I, 4(4268) | Academy at Athens; lived b.c. 428–389.~
108 II, 7(4743) | Gaul, and invaded Spain. In 429 they conquered all the Roman
109 I, 45(4601)| was brought out about b.c. 438.~
110 I, 4(4272) | unscrupulous; born about b.c. 450, assassinated 404.~
111 II, 7(4743) | dominions in Africa, and in 455 they plundered Rome. Their
112 II, 11(4761)| antiquity. Born about b.c. 460, died about 357.~
113 I, 4(4269) | 479) died, probably in 468, so poor that he did not
114 I, 4(4269) | the Athenians at Platæa (479) died, probably in 468,
115 I, 4(4269) | He fought at Marathon (490), and although in exile
116 I, 22(4384)| inheritance (Josh. xix. 50), but in Judges ii. 9, we
117 I, 48(4636)| seldom written less than 500 lines a-day, and to have
118 II, 37(4938)| Jer. 51:6, Jer. 6:14.~
119 I, 1(4260) | Ephesus. Flourished about b.c. 513.~
120 II, 37(4939)| Jer. 7:4, Ps. 14:4, Ps. 53:4.~
121 I, 48(4635)| He died b.c. 277 in the 53rd year of his age, 7 years
122 I, 42(4590)| Flourished about b.c. 540–510.~
123 II, 17(4826)| Mark 5:43, Luke 8:55. Our Lord is not related
124 II, 19(4839)| S. John vi. 56.~
125 II, 29(4902)| S. John vi. 57 sq.~
126 I, 4(4267) | Crotona, in Italy, b.c. 580–510. See some of his sayings
127 I, 48(4621)| in b.c. 78 at the age of 60 was hastened by his dissolute
128 II, 31(4913)| Ezek. 16:62, 63.~
129 I, 1(4259) | Æn x. 640.~
130 I, 48(4636)| to have left behind him 705 works.~
131 I, 13 | 903; ἀπερισπάστως́̈ The difficulty of translation
132 I, 48(4621)| Nicopolis, and his death in b.c. 78 at the age of 60 was hastened
133 II, 6(4726) | on Illustrious Men, chap. 80:—Firmianus, qui et Lactantius,
134 I, 13 | use to render Πρὸς τὸ εὔσχημον κὰι εὐπρόσεδρον
135 I, 41(4575)| Virg. Æn. vii. 803: id. xi. 535.~
136 I, 26 | women or wives” (for γυνή in Greek has both meanings) “
137 I, 35 | is the 4498 meaning of σὼφρονα; 4499 “distinguished,”
138 I, 48(4619)| victory over Mithridates in 81; and as her recovery was
139 I, 23 | without mother, 4397 Α᾽γενεαλόγητος , that is,
140 I, 13 | κὰι εὐπρόσεδρον τῷ Κυρί& 251· ἀπερισπ&#
141 II, 6(4735) | 1 Cor. xv. 85.~
142 II, 9(4753) | Corinth, at the age of nearly 90, b.c. 323.~
143 I, 43(4595)| Hasdrubal and his family, with 900 deserters and desperadoes,
144 I, 13 | πρόσεδρον τῷ Κυρί& 251· ἀπερισπάστως́̈
145 I, 48(4622)| the augur, consul b.c. 95, was divorced by Pompey
146 I, 48(4636)| written less than 500 lines a-day, and to have left behind
147 I, 36 | the lower portions of the abdomen, which perform the functions
148 II, 32 | meaning attaches to each. Abel and Seth were called at
149 II, 2 | and mine own clothes shall abhor me.” But that we may not
150 I, 26 | martyrdom, but virginity abides with Christ, and its sleep
151 II, 22 | different animals with different abodes according to their rank?
152 I, 14 | Fratricide and digamy were abolished by the same punishment—that
153 I, 10 | dealt treacherously, and an abomination is committed in Israel and
154 II, 34 | side of Jordan, a district abounding in cattle, while the remaining
155 I, 45 | relates that when her husband Abradatas was slain, Panthea who had
156 I, 42(4588)| all probability only an abridgment of Plato’s dialogue of Timæus.~
157 II, 5 | drink wine, not perry. In abstaining from meats they please their
158 II, 30 | attaches are clothed with more abundant honour; whereas our comely
159 II, 9(4754) | followers, who were hence called Academici. Cicero called his villa
160 II, 9(4754) | originally belonging to the hero Academus. Here was a Gymnasium with
161 I, 41(4584)| Hyacinthus, the beautiful youth accidentally slain by Apollo, and from
162 II, 6(4726) | sub Diocletiano principe accitus cum Flavio grammatico, cujus
163 I, 39 | believers, to whom Paul went, accompanied by Titus and Barnabas, says
164 II, 15 | departure which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.” For the passion
165 I, 49 | relates that he knew an accomplished man who before going out
166 II, 16 | itself: save that to him who accounteth anything to be unclean,
167 II, 35 | the point Jovinianus had accumulated countless instances from
168 II, 37 | what offences you please: accuse me of luxurious and delicate
169 I, 33 | women, why should they not acknowledge themselves inferior to perpetual
170 II, 7 | Because pigs which fatten on acorns, chestnuts, roots of ferns,
171 I, 8 | a diversity of gifts, I acquiesce in marriage, lest I should
172 I, 41 | protector of their chastity acquitted. How shall we sufficiently
173 II, 13 | that they took, so that the action of its warmth might diminish
174 I, 48 | the Censor, had a wife Actoria Paula, a woman of low origin,
175 | actually
176 II, 5(4723) | Casto Isidis et Cybeles eos adæquas. Compare Arnob. Bk. V.,
177 I, 14 | judgement with wisdom, and adapts the severity of the strain
178 I, 23 | runaway steed, bitten by an adder and fell backwards. But
179 I, 25(4414)| Apocryphal additions to Daniel.~
180 II, 2 | might then say that he was addressing those whose baptism had
181 I, 48(4616)| his Tusculan estate which adjoined Cicero’s villa. Hirtius
182 II, 24 | sentence as Sodom, Gomorrha, Admah, and Zeboiim, was preserved
183 I, 45 | have voluntarily died for Admetus, and Penelope’s chastity
184 II, 28 | find in heaven and in the administration of God. You must not therefore
185 II, 37 | eaten with bitter herbs. Admirable are your utterances and
186 II, 19 | hand, that the bad ground admitted of three degrees of sterility:
187 I, 33 | he was not at liberty to admonish the people. His wife died,
188 II, 11 | i.e., in medical phrase, by adopting a “slender diet.” The same
189 II, 14 | visits them, he is wont to adore them, and thinks the peace
190 I, 27 | In like manner that women adorn themselves in modest apparel,
191 II, 24 | triumph. But you, with no less adroitness than perversity, make the
192 I, 36 | would be no prostitutes, no adulteresses, no wailing infants in town
193 I, 13 | are rather incestuous than adulterous. And, for fear he should
194 II, 3 | person of Christ: that no advantage may be gained over us by
195 II, 3(4688) | amusements of every kind, advocated extreme simplicity of female
196 I, 26(4417)| much tampered with by the advocates or opponents of celibacy.
197 I, 43(4594)| makes Dido a contemporary of Æneas, and represents her as destroying
198 I, 41 | virginity. But if in the Æolian dialect “Sibyl” is represented
199 I, 43(4595)| retired into the temple of Æsculapius, as if to make a brave defence.
200 II, 7(4739) | shores of Upper Egypt and Æthiopia. The whole coast was called
201 I, 13(4333)| divisus est, and so also the Æthiopic Version.~
202 II, 15 | was lost; the former was affectionately addressed to a fasting servant. 4793
203 I, 38 | hand of God; let us set our affections on things above, not upon
204 II, 9 | to desire the thing which affords us pleasure. That the mind
205 II, 13 | and black bread. Both the aforesaid Xenophon, Theophrastus,
206 II, 7 | scandalous. Force a Syrian, an African, or Arabian to swallow worms,
207 II, 7 | land-crocodiles, and the Africans even green lizards. In Egypt
208 I, 49(4641)| Daughter of P. Scipio Africanus, and wife of Ti. Sempronius
209 I, 16 | so that there might be an after-growth for cutting down. And at
210 I, 41(4577)| that Iphigenia, daughter of Agamemnon should be sacrificed. See
211 I, 41(4582)| in the army of the tyrant Agathocles, and were quartered in the
212 II, 14 | was his pantry: and when aged he carried a stick to support
213 II, 36 | done and his cheeks all aglow, he belongs to your herd,
214 II, 21 | righteousness. But a minute ago you were barefooted: now
215 I, 12(4319)| Jerome uses the Greek word ἀγωνοθέτης —President of the Games.~
216 I, 45 | lay down upon it in the agony of death, that she might
217 I, 47 | Or if she be a good and agreeable wife (how rare a bird she
218 I, 10 | an unbeliever? And what agreement hath a temple of God with
219 II, 7(4746) | An agricultural people on the W. coast of
220 I, 44(4598)| She was the wife of Agron, and assumed the sovereign
221 I, 41 | the image of Cybele was aground in the Tiber, it is related
222 II, 15 | tears of repentance. 4796 Ahab, the most impious of kings,
223 I, 20 | same thing was said by 4365 Ahimelech the priest to David when
224 II, 6 | purpose to discuss bodily ailments and their cure. If you think
225 I, 37 | Wherefore also we make it our aim, whether in the body, or
226 I, 36 | shield of truth the darts aimed at us. I can indeed say: “
227 II, 3(4689) | whose doctrines were near akin in many respects to those
228 I, 45 | her to marry again. 4601 Alcestis is related in story to have
229 II, 13(4768)| was chief librarian of the Alexandrian library. He afterwards became
230 II, 14(4777)| and philosophers of the Alexandrine school; but some fragments
231 II, 4 | united to Himself a church of alien birth from among the Gentiles,
232 I, 10 | that he would not bring an alien-born as a wife for his son Isaac.
233 I, 1(4257) | Sibylla legerit,~Interpretari alium potesse neminem.~
234 I, 36 | were we so fashioned by the all-wise creator, that we burn for
235 II, 17 | of a honey-comb, not to allay hunger and to gratify His
236 II, 6 | has limbs. Peacock’s dung allays the inflammation of gout.
237 I, 13 | spare you.” Thus, he says, I allege tribulation as a motive,
238 I, 48(4615)| had given him besides her alleged extravagance it is hard
239 I, 45 | were close by and whose alliance he had discarded for the
240 I, 7 | not? And in case it were allowable to take wives, would the
241 I, 49 | lust is satiated. The first allurement gone, the charm is lost.
242 I, 43 | 43. Let these allusions to the virgins of the world,
243 II, 15 | was found worthy through alms-giving and frequent fasts to receive
244 | along
245 I, 40(4564)| states, was arranged in alphabetical order.~
246 I, 49 | unless husband and wife alternately put their lips to the cup;
247 II, 15 | battle was fought against Amalek while Moses prayed, and
248 I, 30(4463)| V. “Look from the top of Amana.”~
249 II, 21 | At the same time, I am amazed at the portentous forms
250 II, 37 | have in your camp, even amazons with uncovered breasts,
251 I, 44(4598)| the assassination of an ambassador, and in 228 she obtained
252 I, 48 | remark of 4631 Terence, ambiguously expressed on purpose—“How
253 I, 44 | s love, and the highest ambition of the rivals, and the proof
254 II, 3 | possession. For the lion lurks in ambush to slay the innocent. 4692 “
255 I, 12 | then if, placed as we are, amid temptations of the flesh
256 I, Int | Jovinian is said to have “amidst pheasants and pork rather
257 I, 31 | sandals, 4477 O daughter of Aminadab,” which is, being interpreted,
258 II, 15(4805)| Amos ii. 12.~
259 I, 43 | having collected a vast amount of gold and silver, sailed
260 I, 48 | the third to have betrayed Amphiaraus, and to have preferred a
261 I, 47 | husband in good health and of ample means, and after saying
262 II, 3(4688) | denounced profane learning and amusements of every kind, advocated
263 II, 9(4756) | centuries afterwards by the Anabaptists.~
264 I, 23(4397)| without genealogy,” i.e., his ancestry was unrecorded. See Farrar’
265 I, 36(4508)| Andabatæ.~
266 I, 48(4628)| See the Andromache.~
267 II, 25 | the Apostles, do you think Annas and Caiaphas, and Judas
268 I, 46 | affection. When a relative urged Annia to marry again (she was
269 I, 47 | what many long for. It is annoying to have what no one thinks
270 II, 17 | when we fast, 4824 bids us anoint our head and wash our face,
271 II, 15 | not his mouth; he was not anointed with oil; and the angel
272 I, 10(4311)| that waketh and him that answereth.”~
273 II, Int | p. 387 Jerome answers the second, third, and fourth
274 I, 41(4577)| sacrificed. See Dict. of Ant.~
275 II, 12(4766)| Or, “an ante-room to the closet”—Meditatorium.
276 II, 21 | Apostle John says that many Antichrists had come, and to make no
277 I, 29 | the judgements of God, and anticipate his sentence as we choose.
278 II, 25 | slothful: the former are ever anticipating the advent of our Lord,
279 II, 3(4688) | has been described as an anticipation of the mediaeval system
280 I, 4 | more gladly drink Christ’s antidote after the devil’s poisonous
281 II, 6 | from which we make our antidotes against poison, may be applied,
282 II, 7(4748) | and founded the city of Antinoopolis.~
283 I, 11(4313)| operation. See Josephus, Antiq. Bk. xii. c. v. sec. 1,
284 I, 24 | he cannot be the king’s antitype or attain to his merit.
285 II, 6(4725) | the reigns of Hadrian and Antoninus Pius, a.d. 117–161. Only
286 II, 4 | of the fishermen like an anvil that cannot be wearied: 4717
287 I, 13 | τῷ Κυρί& 251· ἀπερισπάστως́̈ The difficulty
288 II, 11 | Hippocrates in his Aphorisms teaches that stout persons
289 I, 40 | for the sauces of 4563 Apicius and 4564 Paxamus, for baths
290 II, 14 | the two treatises against Apion, describes three sects of
291 II, 7(4747) | treatise of Porphyry Περὶ ἀποχῆς ἐμψύχιων.~
292 I, 42(4591)| his name from his teacher Apollonius Cronus.~
293 II, 22 | says: 4851 “I have planted, Apollos watered: but God gave the
294 I, 4(4267) | his sayings in Jerome’s Apology, iii. 39–40.~
295 I, 4(4271) | that is, in ἀταραξία and ἀπονία, or the freedom from pain
296 I, 11(4313)| v. sec. 1, where certain apostates from Judaism are said “to
297 I, 26 | they were received into the Apostolate, they forsook the offices
298 I, 5 | dashes into rhetoric and apostrophizes virginity thus: “I do you
299 I, 42 | Plato, was violated by an apparition of Apollo, and they agree
300 I, 26 | Scripture. He has made his appeal to the Apostles, because
301 II, 35 | under two heads, and he appealed either to philosophy, or
302 II, Int | now recapitulates (35) and appeals (36)against the licentious
303 I, 40 | and sleek, and of bright appearance, who always walks with the
304 I, 38 | For the grace of God hath appeared, bringing salvation to all
305 II, 15 | and Gomorrha might have appeased it, had they been willing
306 II, 11 | longing for luxuries, but appeases hunger and thirst. Persons
307 II, 36 | other hand all the people applauded the doctrine of the Pharisees,
308 II, 6 | is relieved by the same application. As for the fat of pigs,
309 I, 24 | he is. But if Jovinianus approves the example of Solomon,
310 I, 34 | portion of the people, in approving married candidates seem
311 II, 7 | a Syrian, an African, or Arabian to swallow worms, he will
312 II, 7 | abundance? For instance, the Arabians and Saracens, and all the
313 I, 9 | Menander, and 4306 Aratus. When you are discussing
314 II, 14 | was the gateways and city arcades. And when he wriggled into
315 I, 41 | intense grief throughout Arcadia that the people took up
316 II, 28 | kingdom of heaven there are Archangels, Angels, Thrones, Dominions,
317 II, 23 | be a Lucifer, another an Arcturus, a third an Orion, another
318 I, 22(4384)| inheritance with the eyes of an ardent controversialist when he
319 I, 49 | tells us that “He who too ardently loves his own wife is an
320 I, 41 | of Demotion, chief of the Areopagites, having heard of the death
321 I, 36(4507)| fixed on the passage of the Argo between them.”~
322 I, 37 | 37. But why do we argue, and why are we eager to
323 II, 27 | of women, there has not arisen a greater than John the
324 II, Int | vi. 13, as to the danger arising from food. There are among
325 I, 41 | Mamertina was destroyed. Aristoclides, tyrant of Orchomenos, fell
326 I, 21 | holy ground.” For if the armed host of the Lord was represented
327 I, 5 | Kenite, and extols her for arming herself with the 4281 stake.
328 II, 5(4723) | Cybeles eos adæquas. Compare Arnob. Bk. V., and Jerome’s Letter
329 II, 6(4726) | Firmianus, qui et Lactantius, Arnobii discipulus, sub Diocletiano
330 I, 40(4564)| which, Suidas states, was arranged in alphabetical order.~
331 II, 34(4923)| Ps. cxix. in our arrangement of the Psalter. The psalm
332 I, 6 | best to draw up in full array against myself all his efforts,
333 I, 26 | Yet Jovinianus, who has arrayed against us Zacharias and
334 II, 34 | and eighteenth psalm we arrive by fifteen steps at the
335 II, 5 | 5. At length we have arrived at the question of food,
336 I, 1(4255) | Hor. Ars Poet. 139.~
337 I, 44 | over conquered Athens? 4597 Artemisia, also, wife of Mausolus,
338 I, 48(4618)| without authority. See Long’s Article on Sallust in Smith’s Dict.
339 I, 42(4591)| as the introducer of the arts of civilized life. The philosopher
340 I, 1 | syllable; for I wished first to ascertain his meaning, and then to
341 II, 14 | Neanthes of Cizycus, and 4772 Asclepiades of Cyprus, at the time when
342 II, 14(4777)| Poems ascribed to the mythical Orpheus
343 I, 32 | Phanuel, of the tribe of Aser, was alive, distinguished
344 I, 37 | things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things
345 I, 25 | And the king spake unto Ashpenaz the master of his eunuchs,
346 II, 6 | boys were disputing, by asking you why were vipers and
347 I, 47 | Theophrastus. In it the author asks whether a wise man marries.
348 II, 22 | the inconsistency of an assailant, when we have to refute
349 I, 4(4272) | unscrupulous; born about b.c. 450, assassinated 404.~
350 I, 44(4598)| of her having caused the assassination of an ambassador, and in
351 I, 46(4605)| One of the assassins of Julius Cæsar. Jerome
352 II, 9 | anxiety about sickness the assaults of lust might be defeated,
353 I, 47 | despised nobody at the ladies’ assemblies.’ ‘Why did you ogle that
354 II, 37(4936)| Pythagoras asserted that he had once been the
355 I, 4 | and the twice married, to assist my efforts with their prayers.
356 I, 41 | whom, when she came to his assistance, Turnus had no higher praise
357 II, 21 | another Proteus, so rapidly assumes. In sexual intercourse and
358 I, 3 | that “they who with full assurance of faith have been born
359 I, 3(4263) | By birth an Assyrian, and a pupil of Justin Martyr.
360 II, 6(4727) | Historia Naturalis embraces astronomy, meteorology, geography,
361 I, 5 | together, let not man put asunder”: and he immediately adds, 4275 “
362 I, 41 | chastity. Fable relates that Atalanta, the virgin of Calydonian
363 I, 4(4271) | enjoyments, that is, in ἀταραξία and ἀπονία, or the freedom
364 I, 46(4605)| of Cato by his first wife Atilia, before marrying Brutus
365 II, 15 | of food? and he could not atone with tears for the impatience
366 I, 48(4638)| Jovem) statorem hujus urbis atque imperii vere nominamus.”~
367 II, 21 | exquisite in the fashions of the Atrebates and the Laodiceans. Your
368 I, 46 | without Brutus; for women attach themselves closely to particular
369 I, 4(4271) | have deserved the odium attached to his name by Jerome and
370 I, 39 | precious are the promises attaching to virginity which He has
371 I, 47 | fortress is captured which is attacked on all sides. Men marry,
372 I, 27 | she has herself lost, she attains in her children, and makes
373 I, 41 | when the men of Messene attempted to outrage fifty Lacedæmonian
374 I, 1 | the language of men, he attempts something loftier.4255~ “
375 II, 9 | be hampered by the vices attendant on luxury, he deceives himself.
376 I, 30 | Peace, has, and what his attendants are like? 4459 “Behold,”
377 I, 8 | Paul! Fortunate is he who attends to the Apostle’s command,
378 II, 7 | to Gaul, heard that the Atticoti, a British tribe, eat human
379 I, 41(4578)| of office, scourged and attired like a corpse. “From the
380 I, 39(4557)| living and abiding,’ are attributes of God. But in the original
381 I, 2 | whirlpool of vice, to grant me audience and the support of many
382 II, 7(4740) | with great slaughter on Aug. 9, 378.~
383 I, 48(4622)| of Q. Mucius Scævola, the augur, consul b.c. 95, was divorced
384 I, 26(4417)| a believer” (or sister). Augustine, Tertullian, Theodoret, &
385 I, 40(4563)| notorious epicure of the time of Augustus and Tiberius.~
386 I, 41(4577)| was detained by a calm at Aulis. The seer Calchas advised
387 I, 21 | who was previously called Ause, or better, as in the Hebrew,
388 I, 3(4263) | Temperates, from their great austerity. They also bore the names
389 I, 35(4497)| derivative translation Vigilant, Auth., though possibly defensible
390 II, 22 | especially when by the authoritative utterances of His own prophet
391 I, 42 | of India, the opinion is authoritatively handed down that Budda,
392 II, 34(4923)| psalms are called in our Authorized Version, Songs of Degrees (
393 I, 34 | afforded him, if he choose to avail himself of it, for the practice
394 II, 15 | prayers of the people scarce availed to save him. 4792 Elijah
395 I, 11 | neither celibacy nor marriage availeth anything without works,
396 II, 17 | works, and that a holy fast avails for the cure of sin. Moreover,
397 I, 5 | wife, was stricken by the avenging hand of God. He praises
398 II, 37 | large one, and so in your aviaries not only turtle-doves, but
399 II, 10 | therefore is not devoured with avidity. No one has his stomach
400 II, 13 | speak of birds, when they avoided even eggs and milk as flesh.
401 I, 13 | about that service, and await the Lord’s will, so that
402 I, 45 | sword which he had seized, awaited in alarm the approach of
403 I, 37 | is high time for you to awake out of sleep: for now is
404 II, 28 | virtues, and they will be awarded not to persons, but to persons’
405 I, 11 | another. Keep your wife awhile, and do not go too fast
406 II, 7(4741) | the N. E. of the Sea of Azov, E. of the river Don.~
407 II, 37 | Hananiah, the son of Azzur, broke the bars of wood
408 I, 37 | unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you
409 II, 14 | fruits. 4774 Bardesanes, a Babylonian, divides the Gymnosophists
410 II, 4(4711) | star, whose movements the Babylonians had been the first to record.
411 II, 4 | king was restored after the Babylonish captivity to his former
412 I, 28 | who does not quarrel is a bachelor.” 4440 “It is better to
413 I, 49 | laws promulgated against bachelors? How can he who is married
414 II, 7 | beloved of the deceased. The Bactrians throw their old men to dogs
415 II, 15 | Joshua, the son of Nun, bade sun and moon stand still,
416 I, 41(4578)| after being stripped of her badges of office, scourged and
417 I, 37 | soberly as the Latin versions badly render), but “think,” he
418 I, 19 | find anything among his baggage, and there swore that he
419 II, 13 | palm-leaves, called by them baiæ: a sloping footstool laid
420 I, 15 | must be weighed in an even balance.~
421 I, 40 | swelling cheeks and nicely balancing his inflated utterances,
422 II, 8 | sorts of incense, fragrant balsam, 4751 kuphi, 4752 œnanthe,
423 I, 42 | Pythagoras was at the head of a band of virgins, and instructed
424 I, 40 | it is useless for him to bandy words with us when his acts
425 I, 48 | forehead, rough-haired, and bandy-legged. At last they planned an
426 I, 3 | the writhing body. What is baneful shall be discovered, that,
427 II, 14 | fever and lay down upon the bank by the road-side. And when
428 II, 14 | trees which grow on the banks of the Ganges, or with common
429 I, 41 | had slain Phidon at the banquet, they commanded his virgin
430 I, 48 | and he was accustomed to banter them for disagreeing about
431 I, 3 | all who have kept their baptismal vow.”~
432 I, 16 | circumcision and uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bondman, freeman:
433 I, 15 | own head, practised going barefoot, let his hair grow long,
434 I, 3 | scarcely left harbour, and had barely hoisted sail, when a swelling
435 I, 39 | accompanied by Titus and Barnabas, says in his Epistle: 4550 “
436 I, 5 | exchanged the curse of barrenness for the blessing of child-bearing.
437 I, 43(4595)| His wife, standing on the base of the temple, was near
438 I, 26 | present our argument must be based wholly on Scripture. He
439 II, 37 | Syriac, and Greek languages. Basilides, the master of licentiousness
440 I, 49 | blood it does not taint with bastard offspring; of her children,
441 II, 36 | baths in which the sexes bathe together, the impatience
442 II, 3 | was said, 4672 “He that is bathed needeth not to wash again,”
443 I, 24 | committed adultery with Bathsheba. And because he was a man
444 I, 12 | exultation: this is his strongest battering-ram with which he shakes the
445 II, 3 | when it hath conceived, beareth sin: and the sin, when it
446 II, 14 | wished to place him on a beast or in a conveyance, he did
447 II, 5(4720) | The Italian beccafico.~
448 I, 27 | costly raiment; but (which becometh women professing godliness)
449 I, 48 | Philippics, was entering his bed-room as usual, his wife p. 385
450 I, 5 | the peril of his life, was bedded with the king’s daughter.
451 I, 47 | her and never leave her bedside. Or if she be a good and
452 II, 7 | scarcity of cattle no one eats beef, or makes the flesh of bulls
453 I, 5 | blessing which he received in begetting his son. Sarah, typifying
454 I, 38 | Are ye so foolish? having begun in the Spirit, are ye now
455 II, 14(4770)| on his famous embassy in behalf of his countrymen.~
456 I, 7 | husbands “see their chaste behaviour, and the hidden man of the
457 II, 31 | rests with them either to behead, or to burn, or to shut
458 I, 41 | read such things of human beings, when heathen error also
459 II, 36 | seen any day stick in hand belabouring the fools about him, and
460 I, Int | pheasants and pork rather belched out than breathed out his
461 I, 8 | like. For 4296 “he that believeth in Christ ought himself
462 II, 7(4743) | kingdom was destroyed by Belisarius in 535.~
463 | below
464 I, 18 | which had not in the first benediction been allowed. He should
465 I, 47 | under the obligation of benefits received, are better able
466 I, 47(4610)| philosopher to whom Aristotle bequeathed his library and the originals
467 II, 29 | power of the city which they besieged. No doubt the words, “Know
468 I, 34 | promotion to the clergy who besmear them with flattery. To take
469 I, 41 | higher praise which he could bestow than to call her a virgin. “
470 II, 14 | On the last of these he bestows wondrous praise because
471 I, 5 | the married. Suddenly he betakes himself to the Gospel, and
472 I, 22 | land of Moab over against Beth-peor: but no man knoweth of his
473 II, 27 | meaning of the ladder at Bethel, on which the angels come
474 I, 19 | by the son of sorrow near Bethlehem which was destined to be
475 I, 46 | bad breath. In dudgeon he betook himself home, and on complaining
476 I, 48 | adulterer, the third to have betrayed Amphiaraus, and to have
477 I, 37 | of believers, and in this betrothal to Christ include both married
478 I, 41 | heard of the death of her betrothed, 4581 Leosthenes, who had
479 I, 30 | is mine, and I am his: “betwixt my breasts shall he lie,”
480 II, 21 | his second proposition) bewail their sinfulness, you alone
481 I, 46(4605)| had been married to M. Bibulus and had borne him three
482 I, 20 | the widow of a priest is bidden abide in the house of her
483 I, 48(4632)| shocking proposal do you make, bidding me behold my queen naked!
484 I, 46 | took to wife a virgin, Bilia, of such extraordinary chastity
485 I, 12 | to a wife, give her not a bill of divorce. If I am loosed
486 I, 5 | third four, Leah, Rachel, Billah, and Zilpah, and he declares
487 II, 35 | sighted land: the foaming billows have been rolling mountain-high:
488 I, 18 | neither ate flesh, nor gave bills of divorce, nor suffered
489 II, 15 | the land took food. And so binding was a solemn fast once it
490 II, 14 | you.” 4779 Satyrus, the biographer of illustrious men, relates
491 I, 48(4618)| Smith’s Dict. of Classical Biography.~
492 I, 47 | must be called my lady, her birth-day must be kept, we must swear
493 I, 19 | which was destined to be the birthplace of our Lord, the herald
494 II, 15 | some. Why did Esau lose his birthright? Was it not on account of
495 II, 37 | preach it are filled with bitterness. For with the unleavened
496 I, 49 | intercourse. There is nothing blacker than to love a wife as if
497 II, 7 | for fat white worms with blackish heads, which breed in decayed
498 II, 5(4723) | In nostris xerophagiis blasphemias ingerens. Casto Isidis et
499 I, 4 | and are listening to the blasphemies of the Pharisees.~
500 II, 38 | Christ have blotted out the blasphemy written on your forehead.
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