17-cried | crimi-giant | gibbe-nabad | nabat-shran | shrin-zion
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1001 II, XXXIV | difficulty of distinguishing the gibbet on which the Lord had hung,
1002 I, XXIII | Hebrews by arms. But the Gibeonites, a powerful nation with
1003 I, XXXIII | and Saul had appointed Gilgal as the place where his army
1004 I, LIV | weariness of accumulating spoil) Godolia, who belonged to the same
1005 I, XXXIV | of the Philistines named Goliath, a man of marvelous size
1006 I, XVI | related to have laid up a full gomer of it in a golden vessel.~
1007 II, XXI | then, selected Ptolemy, Gorgias, Doro, and Nicanor, as generals
1008 II, XXXI(29) | use of what was called the Gospel according to the Hebrews.~
1009 II, XXVII | which are contained in the Gospels, and subsequently in the
1010 I, XLVI | reigned one year, his mother, Gotholiah, seized the supreme power,
1011 I, XXIV | captivity, until, with Gothoniel as their leader, they were
1012 II, IX | Persians by magistrates and governors. Accordingly, these took
1013 I, XI | increasing the number of granaries, took measures against the
1014 II, XXXIII(31) | edifices, which, in size and grandeur, had some resemblance to
1015 II, XI | therefore begged the king to grant him the liberty of going
1016 II, I | without a divine impulse, and, granting him the favor which was
1017 II, XIII | returned, and when he saw Human grasping the knees of the queen,
1018 I, XXXV(58) | Reficiendi corporis gratia": different from the Hebrew
1019 II, XLVII | of Ydacius, obtained from Gratianus, who was then emperor, in
1020 II, XXXIV | each other in seeking to gratify the desires of the queen,
1021 II, VIII(8) | words are,-~"Hic regina gravem gemmis auroque poposcit
1022 I, XLII | from David, as he was his great-great-grandson. He was a pious worshiper
1023 II, XLIX | where he betook himself to Gregory the prefect. He, after he
1024 I, XXVII | as the heat of the day grew violent, and he began to
1025 II, XI | have prayed to God with groans and many tears. He also
1026 II, XXI | Boiling with wrath on these grounds (for he who had of old been
1027 I, XXVIII | had been cut off began to grow again, and his strength
1028 II, XLVI | it were, a torch to the growing conflagration, so that he
1029 I, XXXIV(56) | David was undoubtedly then a grown-up young man.~
1030 II, XXXVI(38) | can only make a probable guess at the meaning.~
1031 II, XXXIX(43) | meaning therefore can only be guessed at.~
1032 I, XXIX | the town surrounded the guest, with the view of subjecting
1033 I, XXXI | their course, without any guide, towards Judaea, and showed
1034 II, XLIV | which there lurked a secret guile) that the Son of God was
1035 I, XV | owing to the fact that the gulf of the Red Sea lay between,
1036 II, XVI | established for herself the habit of going out and returning,
1037 I, II | multitude, certain angels,whose habitation was in heaven, were captivated
1038 II, XXXVI(40) | etiam nostrorum judicio haereticus probatur."~
1039 II, XI | of rebuilding11 had been half accomplished, when the jealousy
1040 II, XXXI(29) | These were half-Jews and half-Christians, and were known at a later
1041 II, XXXI(29) | These were half-Jews and half-Christians, and
1042 I, XLIII | complained that she had only a handful of meal and a little oil,
1043 I, IX | were born to him by the handmaid of Leah, Gad and Asher,
1044 I, XXXIII | mind, and of a singularly handsome figure, so that the dignity
1045 I, XXIV | Then, as almost always happens in a time of prosperity,
1046 II, XLVI | discussion-in fact, altogether a happy man, if he had not ruined
1047 I, XXVII | poorly avenged, ceased not to harass the heathen race with all
1048 I, XI | assuming the garb of a harlot, united with her brother-in-law,
1049 II, XXXVII | design, mix up what was harmless with what was blameworthy,
1050 II, V | unnoticed, since it does in fact harmonize with the Chronicles, and
1051 II, XLII | had set forth his faith in harmony with those conclusions which
1052 I, XXVII | happened that at the time the harvest was ripe, and thus the fire
1053 I, XXV | returning home from the harvest-field, and said unto him; "The
1054 I, XV | Well, as they went forth in haste, a pillar of cloud by day,
1055 I, XXIII | character of our times; and I hasten to return to the subject
1056 I, XXIV | and, gathering together a hasty army, restored them to liberty
1057 I, X | and on that account was hated by his brethren. There was
1058 I, XXXII | set forth the tyranny and haughty rule of kings, while he
1059 I, XL | transcribers, those things which have-been put together, not without
1060 I, XII | them, and accused them of havingcome as enemies, subtly to spy
1061 II, XXIX | And his mortal27 wound was healed," -to be sent forth again
1062 I, XIII | approval, and being restored to health, he got back doubled all
1063 I, XXI | death mowed them down in heaps; and all would have perished
1064 II, XXVIII | Multitudes then came together to hear Paul, and these, influenced
1065 II, XLIV | escaped the notice of the heariers. For in these words, in
1066 I, XVII | sanctified, since they were to hearken to the words of God; and
1067 I, XLIX | remained in the errors of heathenism. In this war, Tobias was
1068 I, LII | to idols. For to such a height had profane observances
1069 I, LI | only two years. He was the heir of his father's impiety,
1070 I, LII | by the aid of the priest Helchia. Having read a book written
1071 I, XLIII | tacitly acknowledged the helplessness of their God. Then Elijah
1072 II, XXXVIII | Valens of Mursa, Theodorus of Heraclia, Stephanus of Antioch, Acatius
1073 II, V | to have sustained life by herbs alone. However, his empire
1074 I, XL | concubines. As a consequence, hesetup idols for them, after the
1075 II, III | The faith of some still hesitates about this point only, while
1076 II, XIII | not forget his friend, and hesitating a little, he withdrew for
1077 II, XII | name, and there is much hesitation in concluding to which of
1078 II, XXVIII | persecution; and I am not sure but hew will be the last also to
1079 II, VIII(8) | genuine. Virgil's words are,-~"Hic regina gravem gemmis auroque
1080 II, XLIII | unfaithfulness secretly lay hid in it. For under an appearance
1081 I, XXXIX | such a way brought out the hidden truth by his sagacity. Accordingly,
1082 II, XXV | of those, who were either high-priests or kings among the Jews,
1083 I, II | and origin, they left the higher regions of which they were
1084 II, XV | and conducted him up the hill. On their inquiring the
1085 II, XIV(16) | historia divina": the writer applies
1086 I, XVI | months covered with the hoar-frost that has been spread over
1087 I, XXVI | which a woman threw, after holding the government for three
1088 II, VIII | entered the temple by a hole opened from below, and had
1089 II, L | Ithacius had no worth or holiness about him. For he was a
1090 II, XL | maintained that it was written Homoiousion, which simply means "of
1091 II, XL | For where the expression Homoousion had been written, which
1092 I, XXXIII | this prohibition, found a honey-comb, and, dipping the point
1093 I, XVII | the place which is called Horeb, brought forth an abundant
1094 I, XXXVI | having sunk down from his horse, that he might not be taken
1095 I, VI | would endure slavery in a hostile country for four hundred
1096 I, XLI | thousand men. But when the two hosts advanced, the people were
1097 I, XXXIV | Hebrews being. at this time hotly engaged in war, as the armies
1098 II, XI | construction by families of houses within it. He reckoned,
1099 II, XXIX(26) | humanis rebus eximitur."~
1100 I, XXV | man of valor." But he in a humble voice complained that the
1101 II, XLVI | he exhibited, a kind of humility in his countenance and manner,
1102 I, XXXIV | him, speedily brought in a hundredforeskins of the Philistines; and
1103 I, XVII(34) | rulers of thousands, of hundreds, and of tens." ~
1104 II, XXXIV | gibbet on which the Lord had hung, disturbed the minds and
1105 I, XVII | in company with Aaron and Hur, was himself simply to be
1106 II, X | lieutenants and rulers to hurry forward the building of
1107 I, XXXI | Betsamis to meet it, and in hurrying, exulting, and returning
1108 II, IX | Persia, but accidentally hurt himself, and died from that
1109 I, XLVIII | was listened to, not in a hypocritical fashion, as at Sodom of
1110 II, XXVI | distinction against the Hyrcani, a very powerful nation,
1111 II, IX | leader was Darius, the son of Hystaspes, who was a cousin of Cyrus,
1112 I, XXIV(43) | and they can easily be identified by any readers who think
1113 I, XLVI | conqueror the territories of the Idumaeans, he had adopted the idols
1114 II, XLIX(65) | labes illa."~
1115 I, II | beautiful virgins, and cherished illicit desires after them, so much
1116 II, XL | from unity; just as, for illustration's sake, a picture of a human
1117 I, XXXIV | very different from what he imagined, for David, according to
1118 II, XLI | abounding in talent, thoroughly imbued, too, with their old unfaithful
1119 I, XLV | was paid by the oil being immensely multiplied, and sufficient
1120 I, XIV | strengthened him with power, and imparted to him the gift of working
1121 I, XIII | broken down, so as, from impatience of his sufferings, in any
1122 I, XVI | the stubbornness of the impatient people showed itself, and
1123 I, LII | constant tears, he averted the impending overthrow. When he learned
1124 I, III | pitch so as to render it impervious to water. He was shut into
1125 II, XXXI | indeed is either foolishly or impiously not accepted by many. And
1126 I, XXXIII | war, or even making any implement for rural purposes. In these
1127 II, VIII(8) | gemmis auroque poposcit Implevitque mero paternam, quam Belus
1128 II, II | into the future which it implied. As he could not of himself
1129 I, XXV | they turned to the Lord, imploring his wonted tender mercy,
1130 II, XI(12) | ten tribes. He seems to imply that none of them returned
1131 II, L | Treves, did not cease to importune Ithacius, that he should
1132 II, XLVI(57) | occultata secretis": it is impossible to say what is the exact
1133 II, XXII | in position, was really impregnable, the lower parts proved
1134 II, XXXIX | when they could make little impression by their own authority.
1135 II, XLV | were tortured with painful imprisonment and hunger, so that at length
1136 I, V(9) | A most improbable statement. ~
1137 I, XXIX | view of subjecting him to improper treatment. After being much
1138 II, XXXVII | Athanasius, as Marcellus had been improperly acquitted, since now, even
1139 II, L | was a bold, loquacious, impudent, and extravagant man; excessively
1140 I, VI | demanded the new arrivals for impure purposes. Lot offered them
1141 I, XI | she disgraced him by the imputation of a false crime, and complained
1142 II, XXII | the lower parts proved inaccessible, as frequent sallies from
1143 I, LI(81) | omission and consequent inaccuracy. Comp Isa. chap. 37. ~
1144 I, XXIII | more disgraceful) remaining inactive, they look for gifts, and
1145 II, LI | pride, sleepiness, and inactivity. In a word, a large · number
1146 II, XXVI(23) | vincendi": others read "incendii."~
1147 I, XLVII | was forbidden, and offered incense to God, a thing which it
1148 II, XLIV | to them, worn out by the inclemency of winter and positive want;
1149 II, LI | insane plans and obstinate inclinations against a few giving wise
1150 II, XLIII | our people once began to incline in that direction, they
1151 I, XXXVI | preaching, then meant to include also the years of Samuel
1152 II, XXVIII | some length, if it were not inconsistent with the purpose of this
1153 II, XXXVII | that those had not judged incorrectly regarding Athanasius, who,
1154 II, III | establish another kingdom, incorruptible and everlasting, that is,
1155 I, XI | immense quantity, and, by increasing the number of granaries,
1156 I, XXIII | this age, seized, like an incurable disease, upon their minds.
1157 II, XIII | through the whole kingdom from India even to Ethiopia. When Mardochaeus
1158 II, XI | among the Parthians, Medes, Indians, and Ethiopians never returned
1159 I, XI | with a scarlet thread to indicate which of them was born first,
1160 II, III | of iron and partly day, indicates that the Roman empire is
1161 II, XIV | Egyptian by nation, and indignant at the king's conduct, afterwards
1162 II, L | besides, a foul and unheard-of indignity, that a secular ruler should
1163 I, XXVIII | the prowess of a single individual. They, therefore, sought
1164 II, XLI | the public treasury than individuals. I have heard that Gavidius,
1165 II, XXVIII | Antichrist. Our subject would induce me to set forth his vices
1166 II, XLV | a man who, besides the infamy of being a heretic, was
1167 I, XIII | daughter of Pharaoh found an infant in the river, and caused
1168 I, XLVIII | whole people, and even those infants newly born, are commanded
1169 II, XLV | of Petrocorii,55 equally infatuated, and not shrinking from
1170 II, XXXIX(46) | of "refertam," some read "infectam." ~
1171 I, XXXVIII | After this, having become infirm through years and illness,
1172 II, XXX | the minds of all being inflamed, the temple was destroyed,
1173 II, XXXIII | little moment to be able to inflict any wound upon the churches.
1174 II, XXXI | destroy the Christian faith by inflicting an injury upon the place,
1175 I, XLV | rebuking them ordered them to inform the king that his death
1176 I, XI | was liberated from prison informs the king that Joseph was
1177 II, XXVIII | fact that vices are always inimical to virtues, and that all
1178 I, XLIV | their lives. But, with such iniquitous conditions offered, it seemed
1179 II, XXIX | practice the mystery of iniquity.~
1180 I, XXXIII | unmindful of the divine injunctions, ordered the booty to be
1181 II, XXIX | not able to endure the injuries they suffered under the
1182 II, XXXVI | condemnation, and38 a belief in his innocence was above all strengthened
1183 II, XXI | spirit as being superior innumbers, but when a battle took
1184 II, VII | If any one is eager to inquire into these points, he will
1185 II, I | separated from each other, and inquires of each of them in turn,
1186 II, XIV | things, or pursuing different inquiries. But I will now proceed
1187 II, XV | him up the hill. On their inquiring the reason of what had happened,
1188 I, XXXVII | battles the Philistines making inroads upon his kingdom. And at
1189 I, XIV | was covered with stinging insects brought over it, when the
1190 II, IX | period of time, we shall here insert, in order that the succession
1191 I, XIX | not thought proper to be inserted in such a concise work as
1192 I, XXXIX | while the other woman slept, insidiously substituted her child, and
1193 II, II | dream mrvelous for that insight1 into the future which it
1194 I, LI | would not allow the so great insolence of this man to pass unavenged.
1195 I, X | been sent by his father to inspect the flocks and pay a visit
1196 II, VII | experience, for they were instantly devoured to satisfy the
1197 II, IV | Ismael as their leader and instigator of the execrable conspiracy,
1198 II, XXXV | world by the error which it instilled. For by means of the two35
1199 II, XLI | Ariminum, a city of Italy, and instructs Taurus the prefect, not
1200 II, XIV | considering that the king had insulted the race to which he belonged.
1201 I, LI | Ezekias, declaring, with many insulting words, that he, after settling
1202 II, XLVI | not ruined an excellent intellect by wicked studies. Undoubtedly,
1203 I, VIII(14) | they stand, are scarcely intelligible.~
1204 I, IV | time, which I do not here intend to name one by one. Butalthough
1205 I, XXIII | have gone farther than I intended in expressing my loathing
1206 I, XXXVII | And when he had formed the intention of building a temple to
1207 II, XLI | a temple which was then intentionally standing empty. But these
1208 II, XXXVI | this one, that, with wicked intentions, he had received37 Marcellus
1209 II, V | power, retiring from all intercourse with mankind, and to have
1210 I, II | tree from which they were interdicted, and therefore were cast
1211 II, XI(12) | here touches upon a most interesting question-the ultimate destiny
1212 I, XXXII | asking against their own interests.~
1213 I, IV | Japhet the West, and Ham the intermediate parts. After this, till
1214 II, XXII | was then tormented with internal sufferings, he remembered
1215 II, V | author which had become interpolated in course of time, and in
1216 I, XI | that Joseph was a wonderful interpreter of dreams. Accordingly,
1217 I, XI | dreams to Joseph, and he, interpreting these as bearing upon the
1218 II, II | of the king, as well as interprets it. But this matter demands
1219 II, XI | neighboring cities conspired to interrupt the works, and to deter
1220 I, XL | especially since so many ages intervened, rather than that the sacred66
1221 I, I | thrown into confusion by the intestine dangers of the churches.
1222 II, XLIV | and the deceit involved inthis declaration escaped the
1223 II, VIII | idol. Cyrus, then, being on intimate terms with Daniel, asked
1224 II, XLV | perceived the extreme danger intowhich the faith had been brought,
1225 I, VI | their father while he was intoxicated, and hence sprung the race
1226 II, XLVI | Marcus was the first to introduce it into Spain, having set
1227 II, XXXVIII | brought the news should be introduced to his presence, Valens,
1228 II, XXVI(22) | Introsum," towards home; another
1229 I, XXXVII | with the Ammonites, David intrusted the chief command of the
1230 I, L | Tarraca, king of Ethiopia, invaded the kingdom of the Assyrians.~
1231 II, LI | Ithacius, harassed68 with invectives, and at last overcome, threw
1232 II, XXIX | new kinds of death were invented, so that, being covered
1233 II, XXXIX | that there should be an investigation among the bishops as to
1234 II, XXV | who had been received and invited into friendship with him.
1235 I, XLIII | and, after wasting their invocations to no purpose, they tacitly
1236 I, XXVII(47) | and Halm's punctuation, "invocato Deo ex osse, quod manu tenebat,
1237 I, XXVI | that they should rather invoke the aid of their images,
1238 II, XLIX | transferred to the emperor a cause involving such manifest offences.~
1239 II, XXVI | visited, desired to march inwards,22 and to add all the neighboring
1240 I, II | of its founder. From him Irad, and from him again Matuahel
1241 I, LI(81) | consequent inaccuracy. Comp Isa. chap. 37. ~
1242 II, XLII | assemble at Seleucia, a town of Isauria. At that time, Hilarius,
1243 I, XXXVII | despised David, and made Isbaal. king, the son of King Saul.
1244 I, VI | maid-servant a son called Ishmael. Moreover, when he himself
1245 I, IV | occupied different places and islands, nevertheless all made use
1246 II, LI(66) | is probably to the Scilly Isles. ~
1247 I, IX | Reuben, Symeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulon, and a daughter
1248 II, XLVI(59) | perfidiae istius." ~
1249 I, XXIII | even utterly ignorant of it-such a lust for possessing has,
1250 I, XXIV | king of the Canaanites, Jabin by name, subdued the Hebrews
1251 I, XXVI | twenty years. After him came Jair; and after he had held the
1252 II, XI(11) | jamque ad medium machinae processerant."~
1253 I, XXVII | his bonds and seizing the jaw-bone46 of an ass, which chance
1254 I, XLVII | had given place to his son Jeroboa, and after him, again, his
1255 I, XXXVI(63) | and supplemented by Saint Jerome. ~
1256 II, XII | others in beauty. She being a Jewess of the tribe of Benjamin,
1257 I, XLVI | left the kingdom to his son Joa. He raised civil war against
1258 I, LIII | Joachim. He was the brother of Joacha, and the son of Josia, but
1259 II, I | of a certain man called Joachis, a woman of remarkable Beauty,
1260 II, LI | Tertullus, Potamius, and Joannes, as being persons of less
1261 I, XLVII | the kingdom was given to Joathas his son; and he is related
1262 I, XIII | Eliezer. At this epoch lived Job, who had acquired both the
1263 I, XV | God they turned aside, and journeyed towards the Red Sea, where
1264 II, XLIII | by the thought of a weary journeying into foreign lands,surrendered
1265 II, XIII | banquet began to become jovial through the many cups which
1266 I, XII | down to Egypt, to the great joy of the Egyptians and of
1267 I, XXVI | daughter met him, having joyfully gone forth with drums and
1268 I, XXXI | vied with each other in joyously rushing forth from the town
1269 II, XXXVII | conclude, that those had not judged incorrectly regarding Athanasius,
1270 II, XXXVI(40) | qui etiam nostrorum judicio haereticus probatur."~
1271 II, XXXIX(43) | instead of "judicum" read "judicium." The meaning therefore
1272 II, XXXIX(43) | and some, instead of "judicum" read "judicium." The meaning
1273 II, XXXVI | entering into the presence of Julius, bishop of Rome, asked pardon
1274 II, XLVII | the territory under60 his jurisdiction. When this edict became
1275 II, LI(67) | public weal, both of which justified the prosecution of heretics;
1276 I, XVIII | righteous. Thou shall not justify the wicked for rewards.
1277 I, VI(11) | juvinilis aetatis": the meaning is
1278 II, XXXII | deaths was then much more keenly sought after than bishoprics
1279 II, L | for victory with greater keenness than was fitting. And my
1280 II, XVI | given to the sentinels and keepers of the gates. But when by
1281 I, VII | Abraham took a wife named Kethurah, who is called in the Chronicles
1282 II, XIII | to do that, had greatly kindled the wrath of the Persian
1283 I, VIII | should marry within their own kindred. Thus Jacob, setting out
1284 I, XXXI(52) | Called Kirjath-jearim in the English version.~
1285 I, XXXIII | and his father's name was Kish. He was modest in mind,
1286 I, XVIII | put to death. If any one knock out the eye or the tooth
1287 II, XLIX(65) | labes illa."~
1288 I, XI | beauty. And as she was madly laboring under that base passion,
1289 I, IV | of God, in order that the labors of those engaged in the
1290 I, XXXIII(54) | lamas," but others have "lacrimas" or "latebras." ~
1291 I, XXXVI(62) | inserts the usual mark of a lacuna in the text: others omit
1292 I, VII | and had already laid the lad upon the altar, and was
1293 I, XII | he sent them home again, laden with corn, and presented
1294 II, XXXV | the clerics; and even the laity were punished, who had separated
1295 I, XXXIII(54) | followed the reading of Halm, "lamas," but others have "lacrimas"
1296 I, XV | fourteenth day of the month, a lamb without blemish, one year
1297 II, XIII | attracted by the voice of lamentation, and she learned how the
1298 I, XLVIII | appearance of those who lamented along with the human inhabitants.
1299 I, XVIII | uttered their voices, the lamps blazed, and smoke covered
1300 I, XV | road through a continuous land-journey, by the command of God they
1301 II, XLIII | journeying into foreign lands,surrendered to the opposite
1302 I, XLIX | Samaria, because in the language of the Assyrians guards
1303 I, IV | began to speak in a kind of languages very different from their
1304 II, XL | things, and the churches were languishing as if from a sort of disease,
1305 II, XXXVIII | of Ephesus, Georgius of Laodicia, and Narcissus of Neronopolis.
1306 I, LII | the utmost care, profiting largely by the aid of the priest
1307 I, XXV | said to him that this was a larger number than he wished him
1308 II, XVII | the Persians, after having lasted, from the time of its establishment
1309 II, XXIV | Crete, at the instigation of Lasthenes, general of the Cretans,
1310 I, XXXIII(54) | others have "lacrimas" or "latebras." ~
1311 I, XXXVI(63) | which were translated into Latin, and supplemented by Saint
1312 I, IX(18) | Latitudo": Vorstius says this refers
1313 II, LI | revolted from the Catholics. Latronianus, too, and Euchrotia were
1314 II, VIII | were offered to it. Daniel, laughing at the mistake of the man,
1315 II, V | to have done penance by laying aside his kingly power,
1316 II, XLVII | of Aries, Priscillian, a layman indeed, but the leader in
1317 II, XLVII | Helpidius and Priscillian, laymen, were condemned. It was
1318 II, VIII | to the idol. Then Daniel lays open the secret fraud by
1319 I, XXI | with Dathan and Abiron as leaders, endeavored to set themselves
1320 II, XXI | brought together. Under his leadership, several successful battles
1321 I, III | it brought back an olive leaf, in manifest proof that
1322 II, I | Asphane objected that the leanness which would follow might
1323 I, VIII | These are said to have often leaped13 in the womb of their mother;
1324 II, XLI | the emperor, that he might learn what was the faith or opinion
1325 II, XLI | young men of but little learning and little prudencehad been
1326 | least
1327 I, XV | should abstain from what was leavened for seven days, using only
1328 I, XIII(26) | text of Halm, who reads, "lege naturae." But other editions
1329 I, XIII(26) | But other editions have "legem naturae," and the meaning
1330 I, XXIV | by the evil effect of a lengthened peace, they began to sacrifice
1331 II, XXXII | emperor Severus. At this time Leonida, the father of Origen, poured
1332 II, XLII | Acacius, Eudoxius, Vranius, Leontius, Theodosius, Evagrius, Theodulus.
1333 I, XLV | was restored to life, a leper of Syria was cleansed, at
1334 I, XLVII | finally withdrew, covered with leprosy. Under the influence of
1335 I, XLIII | neither should the meal lessen in the barrel nor the oil
1336 I, XLI | imposed upon them might be lessened, he rejected the entreaties
1337 I, XX | Then follows the book of Leviticus, in which the precepts bearing
1338 II, L | had given himself up to lewd doctrines; had been accustomed
1339 I, XI | servant of the king who was liberated from prison informs the
1340 II, XXXVII(42) | libidinem." ~
1341 II, XXXIII | At that time, it is true, Licinius, who was a rival of Constantine
1342 II, LI | island of Sylina66 which lies beyond Britain. A process
1343 II, X | from the king to urge the lieutenants and rulers to hurry forward
1344 II, IX(9) | Stilico was consul during the lifetime of Sulpitius.~
1345 I, XVII | with frequent flashes of lightning. But Moses and Aaron were
1346 I, XLII(69) | Hornius has observed after Ligonius, that, while in the kingdom
1347 I, LII | Chapter LII.~The government then passed
1348 I, LIII | Chapter LIII.~Joachas, his son, having
1349 I, LIII | and the son of Josia, but liker his brother than his father,
1350 I, III | different kinds of beasts were likewise received into it, while
1351 II, XXIII | marched in front of his line, causing immense terror
1352 II, XLVIII | Bordeaux by Delfinus, yet lingering for a little while in the
1353 I, XXVII | pieces with his hands a lion which met him in the way.
1354 II, VII | to be given over to the lions. They, however, did not
1355 I, XX | pieces, as soon as their lips touched the flesh, they
1356 II, I | and, when she would not listen to their unchaste proposals,
1357 I, XLVIII | voice of the prophet was listened to, not in a hypocritical
1358 II, VI(6) | in versum ductae literae": various emendations have
1359 I, LIV | Chapter LIV.~Meanwhile Sedechias, the
1360 I, XLV | and sufficient means for a livelihood was provided for herself.
1361 I, XXIII | intended in expressing my loathing and disgust over the character
1362 II, IX | building by those who had local authority. For, at that
1363 II, XV | perceiving the difficultyof the localities, because he could not reach
1364 II, XXXIV | of the inhabitants of the locality vied with each other in
1365 I, XXVII | enemies. He, with unshorn locks, is said to have been possessed
1366 I, XLIII | Saraptae, and turned aside to lodge with a widow-woman. And
1367 II, XLI | ordered provisions48 and lodgings to be provided. But that
1368 II, XVI | Judith was extolled with the loftiest praises, and is said to
1369 II, XXXIX | years ago, when Arbitio and Lollianus were consuls. Liberius,
1370 II, XXI | persuade to abandon their long-established superstitions, and to draw
1371 II, XXVIII | the ease of women, are not looked upon without some feeling
1372 I, XIX | eating and drinking, God, looking upon these things, would
1373 II, L | him. For he was a bold, loquacious, impudent, and extravagant
1374 I, XXVI | into which they, after losing the town, had betaken themselves
1375 I, XVII | air was shaken with the loud sounds of trumpets, and
1376 II, XII | accustomed to extol her loveliness to all, he one day, when
1377 II, XXII | really impregnable, the lower parts proved inaccessible,
1378 I, X | bore was called Benjamin. lsrael died at the age of one hundred
1379 II, IX | the Antiochus against whom Lucius Scipio Asiaticus made war;
1380 II, XLIV | statement (in which there lurked a secret guile) that the
1381 I, XII(25) | filios omnes benedictione lustravit."~
1382 I, XXXIII | army. The camp of the enemy lying at no great distance showed
1383 II, XVII | Against him Alexander of Macedon engaged in war. And on his
1384 II, III | the sovereignty for the Macedonians. The iron legs point to
1385 II, IX | founding of Rome, while Macerinus and Augurinus were consuls,
1386 II, XI(11) | jamque ad medium machinae processerant."~
1387 I, XXXV | the desert. Saul, almost mad with rage, because he was
1388 I, XI | remarkable beauty. And as she was madly laboring under that base
1389 II, XLI(47) | officialibus": Halm reads "magistri."~
1390 II, XLI(47) | magistris officialibus": Halm reads "
1391 II, XLVIII(62) | magistro officiorum."~
1392 II, XXXVIII | fought at Mursa against Magnentius, Constantius had not the
1393 II, XXXIII | adorned with most numerous and magnificent churches. And Helena, the
1394 I, XXXIII | Saul, unable to resist the magnitude of the spoil, and unmindful
1395 II, L | emperor being led astray by Magnus and Rufus, and turned from
1396 II, XXVIII(25) | Generally spoken of as Simon Magus. ~
1397 I, IX | and Asher, and by the hand maid of Rachel, Dan and Naphtali.
1398 I, XXXIV | of the enemy, the royal maiden would be given him in marriage;
1399 I, XVIII | strike his own man-servant or maidservant, and he or she die of the
1400 II, XXII | armed men were appointed to maintain a perpetual defence. And
1401 I, XII(25) | tamen benedictionis merito majori minorem praeposuisset, filios
1402 II, XLIV | follow the example of the majority, and to derive authority
1403 I, XVIII | If any one strike his own man-servant or maidservant, and he or
1404 I, XI | money, and having been made manager of his house and family,
1405 I, LI | left the kingdom to his son Manasse. He, degenerating much from
1406 I, XI | Aseneh bore him two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. He himself,
1407 I, XIII | Moses, when he had come to manhood, saw a Hebrew being assaulted
1408 I, XVII | mountain. Thus a law was given, manifold and full of the words of
1409 I, XXXV | and simply took away his mantle. Presently going out, he
1410 II, IX | before his death, fought at Marathon, in a battle greatly celebrated
1411 II, XXXIII | threw back the blocks of marble in the faces of those who
1412 II, XLVI | is not easy to explain. Marcus was the first to introduce
1413 I, XXIX | history does not appear marked by strict chronological
1414 I, VIII | that their children should marry within their own kindred.
1415 I, XXXIII | be-taken themselves to the marshes54 For besides the want of
1416 II, LI | began to reverence him as a martyr. The bodies of those who
1417 II, XXXII | then, for the first time, martyrdoms were seen taking place in
1418 I, XXXI | Hebrews, were so struck by the marvelousness of this occurrence that
1419 II, XXXVII | Christ had his beginning in Mary. The Arians, therefore,
1420 II, XXXIII | had presented a horrible mass of ruins was then adorned
1421 I, XVIII | shall be sold, and the two masters shall share the price; they
1422 II, XXVI | means of obtaining23 the mastery. Accordingly he readily
1423 I, X | stratagem all those of the mate sex in the town, and thus
1424 I, I | the source from which my materials have been derived, should
1425 I, XLII(68) | Many editors here read "maternis," instead of "paternis."~
1426 II, VIII | of brass-mere insensate matter-could use either meat or drink.
1427 I, II | Irad, and from him again Matuahel was descended. He had a
1428 I, LIII | public or private, and all of mature age both of the male and
1429 II, XXXII | emperors Diocletian and Maximian, a most bitter persecution
1430 II, XXXII | the middle of that time Maximinus persecuted the clerics of
1431 II, XLIX(64) | Clementen," and join it with "Maximum."~
1432 I, XXXVI | statement in his preaching, then meant to include also the years
1433 II, XI | of the gates finished, he measured out the city for the construction
1434 I, XLVIII(77) | swallowed by a whale in the Mediterranean, have been cast out by the
1435 II, XI(11) | jamque ad medium machinae processerant."~
1436 I, XXV | could. The Hebrews, however, meeting them in every direction,
1437 II, XLI | party. Well, after frequent meetings had been held, nothing was
1438 II, XXII | the Gentiles, presented a melancholy spectacle. But as the Syrians
1439 I, V | Then he was blessed by Melchisedech the priest, and gave him
1440 I, XIX | of metals which had been melted together, there came forth
1441 I, XXIX | horrible deed, divided her members into twelve parts, and distributed
1442 I, XXIX(48) | A clear mistake of memory in our author. The whole
1443 II, XLVI | Egypt, his birthplace being Memphis. His pupils were a certain
1444 II, XXXVIII | Antioch, Acatius of Caesarea, Menofantus of Ephesus, Georgius of
1445 I, II | name of the slain man being mentioned-a fact which is thought by
1446 I, XXIII | whole glory of life by their mercenary dispositions, while they
1447 I, XII(25) | cum tamen benedictionis merito majori minorem praeposuisset,
1448 II, XXXVIII | the victory through the merits of Valens, and not by the
1449 II, VIII(8) | auroque poposcit Implevitque mero paternam, quam Belus et
1450 II, XXXVIII | said that an angel was the messenger who had come to him. The
1451 I, LII | erected shrines made of metal to these fancied deities.
1452 I, XIX | construct images. Then, out of metals which had been melted together,
1453 I, XXXI | was torn in pieces. Then mice, springing up throughout
1454 I, XLIV | having spurned the words of Michea the prophet and cast him
1455 I, XIII | he fled into the land of Midian, and, taking up his abode
1456 I, XI | the boys being born, the midwife had bound his hand with
1457 I, XXI(40) | septingenti et xiiii milia." ~
1458 II, XXXIV(32) | admota militari manu atque omnium provincialium
1459 | million
1460 II, I | to that matter, Daniel, mindful of the traditions of his
1461 II, XVII | by a long peace, began to mingle all things with seditions,
1462 II, XIV | corrupt mouth, or that which mingled truth with fiction. That
1463 I, XXIII | worthy of being read by the ministers of the Church. For these
1464 I, XII(25) | benedictionis merito majori minorem praeposuisset, filios omnes
1465 II, II(1) | mysterio futurorum mirabile." ~
1466 I, XXI | after so many proofs of his miraculous power. He died in the one
1467 I, XVIII | any one cause a woman35 to miscarry, he shall be put to death.
1468 II, L | disciples of Priscillian. The miserable wretch even ventured publicly
1469 II, XI | they had sunk down to the miserably small number which they
1470 II, XV | felt all the sooner the misery of a siege. Being therefore
1471 I, XV | the Hebrew people, through mistaking the road, had come to have
1472 II, XXVI | having finished the war with Mithridates, and settled Armenia and
1473 II, XXXVII | therefore, with cunning design, mix up what was harmless with
1474 I, II | to have sprung, for the mixture with them of beings of a
1475 II, III | shadowed forth those future mixtures of the human race which
1476 I, XXXII | after the manner of the mob, who are always weary of
1477 II, LI | the earth were exposed to mockery and insult.~
1478 II, II | of divination, they were mocking men with their errors, while
1479 II, XXX | furnish an evidence of Roman moderation, but, if destroyed, would
1480 I, XLVIII | and swallowed by a whale-a monster of the deep. Cast out three
1481 I, II | of course, gave birth to monsters.~
1482 I, VI | been at once changed into a monument. As for Sodom, it was burned
1483 I, LII | divine honors to the sun and moon, and even erected shrines
1484 II, XXX | eating all things of the mostabominable nature, and did not even
1485 I, XVII | the Israelites came on to Mount Sinai. There Moses was admonished
1486 I, XXXVIII | victory is said to have been a mournful one to the king: so great
1487 II, XIV | unpolluted by any corrupt mouth, or that which mingled truth
1488 I, XXI | enter. Then truly death mowed them down in heaps; and
1489 II, II | Nabuchodonosor had a dream mrvelous for that insight1 into the
1490 II, IX(10) | plerisque exemplaribus": the mss. varying, as they so often
1491 II, XXXIV(32) | atque omnium provincialium multitudine in studia reginae certantium."~
1492 I, XXXVII | David, ordered him to be murdered, not without regret on the
1493 II, XXVIII | went so far as to be the murderer of his own mother. After
1494 I, LI | the war, at the same time murmuring and crying out that victory
1495 II, XVI | signal of battle. When his mutilated body was discovered, they
1496 I, XLIII | nothing but shudder and mutter to themselves, but still
1497 II, VI | Chaldaeans. When these simply muttered, among themselves and answered
1498 II, II(1) | mysterio futurorum mirabile." ~
1499 II, XLVI | which concealed itself under mystic57 rites. The birthplace
1500 I, XIX | bringing with him Aaron, Nabad, and seventy of the elders.
|