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3002 VI | sufficient, nor may they be uncovered. It was of course lest immodest
3003 XLVII | whether it was created or uncreated; whether it would have an
3004 XX | question of their antiquity be undecided. Nor does this have to be
3005 II | be altogether condemned undefended and unheard. But Christians
3006 XII | reflect that they themselves undergo the same things also in
3007 II | obligation of the penalty by undergoing it, and must not be released
3008 XV | resulting from penalties undergone, and supply the arguments
3009 IX | desired, loaded with as yet undigested human entrails. Flesh which
3010 XVI | not deify crosses bare and undraped. ~Others, certainly more
3011 XL | indeed, because they were undutiful to Him; for when they knew
3012 XXXVII | ready and prepared, although unequal in forces, if it were not
3013 XI | Italy from Pontus, has been unfairly treated, in that he has
3014 XXVII | at the time and get off unhurt, while retaining our own
3015 XXI | matter remains whole and unimpaired, although you derive from
3016 XXXIX | when separated; the same unitedly as individually, causing
3017 XL | caused. All your gods were universally worshipped when the Senones
3018 | unlikely
3019 I | the experienced,—than the unmusical criticizing the musical!
3020 XIV | the bolt was his, acting unnaturally towards his grandson, and
3021 XXII | that, being invisible and unperceived by the senses, they can
3022 XLIII | perhaps truly complain of the unprofitableness of the Christians to them.
3023 XXIX | many gods have had Caesar unpropitious to them. And it makes for
3024 XIX | everything which yet remains unproved is to us proved 58, because
3025 II | believe things of us which are unproven, and they refuse to have
3026 XLIX | fabulous, go unaccused and unpunished, because harmless. ~But
3027 Int | panic-stricken populace, whose unreasoning animosity, and ignorance
3028 XVI | should have omitted any unrefuted rumour, as though privy
3029 Int | puritanism. It was this unrestrained impulsiveness of nature
3030 XXII | hidden blight in the breeze unseasonably hastens forward any fruit
3031 XXII | the air, infected in some unseen way, pours forth its poisonous
3032 XXII | acquainted with daemons; even the untaught vulgar often make use of
3033 | unto
3034 XXX | emperors, for their long life, untroubled reign, safe house, strong
3035 II | compelled to deny, he may deny untruly, and when acquitted, straightway
3036 App | down, which shall have an unvarying application. They are not
3037 XI | and would not rashly nor unworthily nor prodigally dispense
3038 XI | upon the question of their unworthiness, let us suppose that they
3039 XI | in the first place it is unworthy of him that he should need
3040 L | cause of glory or fame, uplifts the banner of valour. Mucius
3041 XIX | came into Argos; and he is upwards of one thousand years earlier
3042 X | common, male, female, rural, urban, nautical, military,—it
3043 XI | the causes which may have urged this. In the first place,
3044 XXI | disasters, were all ever urging the fact that in the last
3045 VIII | when the darkness has been ushered in by the dogs, you may
3046 IX(22) | r Usque ad proconsulatum Tiberii.
3047 XXIII | if those whose names they usurp were any sort of gods at
3048 XXXV(91) | q Avidius Cassius, a usurper in the reign of Marcus Aurelius,
3049 II(7) | c Christo ut Deo. On the reading, see
3050 XVII | Christian 47! Lastly, when uttering these expressions, it looks
3051 III | their pre-Christian days as vagabonds, worthless, and base. In
3052 XXXVIII | atrocity of the arena, or the vain-glory of the xystus. You allowed
3053 XVI(41) | figure of Christ,' adv. Valent. 3. See Dict, Chr. Ant.,
3054 XXIV | Nortia of the Volsinienses, Valentia of the Ocriculani, Hostia
3055 VIII | to do? He will not be a valid Christian, I suppose, who
3056 XIV | condemnation restored the validity of Socrates' testimony to
3057 L | fame, uplifts the banner of valour. Mucius cheerfully left
3058 XXX | grains of incense of trifling value, the tears of an Arabian
3059 XXXV(90) | 20; lxxii. 20; Aelian. Var. Hist. i. 32. ~
3060 XLVIII | comes and goes in a like variation : the stars which die out
3061 XLVII | truth on account of the variety of its defences. But we
3062 XIV | scoffs at Hercules, and Varro, the Roman Cynic, introduces
3063 XXV(75) | reading of some MSS. The MSS. vary between adolatione and adulatione
3064 XVI | the Sun itself in its own vault of heaven. This notion is
3065 XIII | revenue. The Capitol and the vegetable-market are bid for in identically
3066 XVI | others was cut off by a veil spread between. Yet you
3067 Int | and with a considerable vein of latent puritanism. It
3068 XXII | as they declare it. Their velocity is believed to be divinity,
3069 XIII(32) | ubi proscriptorum bona vendebantur.' (Oehler.) ~
3070 XIII(32) | Hastarium est locus, ubi venditiones et locationes publicae;
3071 XIX | distinguished cities, your venerable records and memorials, and
3072 XVI | of the Romans consists in venerating the standards, swearing
3073 VI | religious awe? where the veneration due from you to your ancestors?
3074 XLVI | the point of truth, not by verbal artifice, but by the same
3075 XXII(68) | r Not verbally, but implicitly, in the
3076 XXV(74) | y Verg., Aen. i. 16. ~
3077 VII(21) | q Vergil, Aen. iv. 174. ~
3078 XX | them they are proved. The verification of a prophecy is, I take
3079 XX | believe in them through the verifications in the two other stages
3080 XX | with those which are being verified daily. The same voices pronounce
3081 App | can they who are in real verity Christians be forced to
3082 XVIII(52) | commencement of the LXX. version, which refers to the Law
3083 V | of all things curious; no Vespasian 16, although the vanquisher
3084 XXVI | and the Amazons before the Vestal Virgins. Finally, if the
3085 II | servants you are. The authority vested in you is a constitutional,
3086 L | victory, this is our triumphal vestment, in such a chariot do we
3087 XV | and sacred caps and purple vestments, while the incense is burning,—
3088 XI | prove free from crime or vice, unless you deny that he
3089 XIII | when you make some vicious court-page or other a god
3090 IX | wiped the blood off the victim whom he first made bloody;
3091 App(139) | reads, pastumque venire victimarum, 'there is a sale for fodder
3092 App(139) | i Passimque venire victimas. See Lightfoot, who reads,
3093 L | what a brave man, and a victor even in captivity! Anaxarchus,
3094 L | yet rejoices in it when victorious, because he is acquiring
3095 XII | planes and files are more vigorously applied over every limb.
3096 Int | champion of the faith was, as Vincent of Lerins tells us (Common.
3097 XXXVII(99) | z The Vindex of Christians is God, and
3098 XI | pointed out the use of the vine, Lucullus, who first introduced
3099 XXXV | gleaning that remains after the vintage of traitors 97,—how they
3100 XXXV | doors with laurels, or to violate the light of day with lamps?
3101 XXI | s incest or a daughter's violation, or from adultery with another'
3102 Int | mentioned by Jerome (de vir. illustr. 53), and his death
3103 VI | that, in departing from the virtuous regulations of your ancestors,
3104 XXIV | god of the Casinienses, Visidianus of the Narnienses, Ancharia
3105 XXII | grievous mishaps, and violently visit the mind with sudden and
3106 XXIV | Aesculani, Nortia of the Volsinienses, Valentia of the Ocriculani,
3107 XL | day when fire poured over Volsinii from heaven and over Tarpeii
3108 Pre | PREFACE.~---- ~THE present volume grew naturally out of my
3109 V | motion with his own first vote. The senate, because it
3110 XXI | by the violence of their votes extorted from him the sentence
3111 IX | temple of crimes, as on votive crosses; as the soldiery
3112 XXV | opposition to the appointment and vow of Juno, as to that most
3113 XXXI(80) | 14; de coron. 13; or Dei vox (in litteris sacris nostris)
3114 III(9) | 235, 'La pronunciation vulgaire, en effet, était chrestiani.'
3115 XI(29) | attested reading gives, cum vultis, 'when you like to admit
3116 XXV | and there were no Capitols vying with the sky, but the altars
3117 XXXIX | liberty for their belly's wage, amidst insults begotten
3118 VIII | before it has really lived; wait for the flight of the newly-entered
3119 XXXVII | stones and fires, without waiting for your permission or instigation?
3120 XXI | restraining the winds and walking upon the sea, shewing that
3121 App(138) | Apology for Christianity' (Wallon, Hist, de l'esclav. dans
3122 IX | first made bloody; that stag wallowed in the blood of a gladiator.
3123 XXI | it not. Scattered abroad, wanderers, exiles from their own sky
3124 XXXIX | thither, nor into outbursts of wantonness, but with the same regard
3125 V(15) | opportune storm relieved the wants of his soldiers, who were
3126 XXV | the vessels were of Samian ware, and the fumes arose from
3127 XLII | healthy hour, and preserve my warmth and colour; I shall be pale
3128 XIV | thirteen months, well-nigh wasted away: Jupiter, lest he should
3129 XLVII | spring that the philosophers watered the dryness of their own
3130 XLVII | perversity, despising faith, waver, and thereby confuse into
3131 XL | and the violence of the waves severed Lucania from Italy,
3132 XLVII | their similarity to it, to weaken the credibility of the truth,
3133 XVII | by evil customs, although weakened by lusts and desires, although
3134 XI | happiness, some Crcesus in wealth, some Demosthenes in eloquence!
3135 XI | more successful than Sulla, wealthier than Crassus, more eloquent
3136 Int | Tertullian's favourite weapon is sarcastic retort, and
3137 L | when the executioner was weary, at last spit out her own
3138 L | virgin foundress of Carthage wedded the funeral pile for her
3139 VI | pledged to himself with the wedding-ring; when women abstained from
3140 V | amongst you divinity is weighed out at human caprice. Unless
3141 I | consistent surmise; they do not welcome a closer investigation.
3142 XIV | chains for thirteen months, well-nigh wasted away: Jupiter, lest
3143 XL | Delos, Rhodes, and Cos went to the bottom with many
3144 XXXV(97) | Partizans of Albinus in the West, A.D. 197; or of Niger in
3145 Int | interesting examples of Western apologetic writings, both
3146 XLVII | like a potter that of his wheel; but the Platonists, that
3147 | wherever
3148 VII | a jealous imagination or whimsical suspicion, or the mere love
3149 | whither
3150 | whoever
3151 Int | was to protest against the wholesale condemnation of a body of
3152 XXIX | Caesar's power, and are wholly dependent on him, have Caesar'
3153 XI | thieves, and deceivers, and whosoever resemble some god of yours,
3154 VII | judge this, no matter how wide the circuit of its diffusion,
3155 XXVI | in her state of natural wildness is older than some of her
3156 Int | pagan readers must have winced, not once nor twice only,
3157 XXI | servants, restraining the winds and walking upon the sea,
3158 VI | breaking open the bins of a wine-cellar. In the time of Romulus
3159 XXXVII | revenge, if we were allowed to wipe out wrong with wrong? But
3160 IX | That boar in the struggle wiped the blood off the victim
3161 VI | themselves, what your ancestors wisely decreed, you, their most
3162 XI | of yours was graver and wiser than Cato, juster and more
3163 XLVI | declared that Socrates was the wisest of all men. How ill-advised
3164 XXXV | he who is meditating or wishing something adverse to it,
3165 XXI | midday, the daylight was withdrawn. Those who were ignorant
3166 IX | less troubled, completely withstand the attack of this sin by
3167 XXXII | which threatens terrible woes, is delayed by the respite
3168 L | overwhelmed; yet only when we have won our cause; therefore we
3169 XXII | extraordinary aberrations. Their wonderful subtilty and tenuity gives
3170 XVI | shapeless piece of wood. Every wooden post which is fixed in an
3171 XLII | gymnosophists, dwellers in the woods, or outlaws from life. We
3172 XVI | foot, carried a book, and wore a toga. We laughed both
3173 XXI | up, speaketh, teacheth, worketh, and is CHRIST. ~Receive
3174 XLVII | itself, the spirits of error working out that antagonism. By
3175 XLVI | deliberation? Yet any Christian working-man you please both finds and
3176 XLII | join crafts, and throw our workmanship open to the public to your
3177 XLII | nor without baths, shops, workshops, inns, fairs, and other
3178 XIV | leads you to slay all your worn-out and diseased and scurfy
3179 XXIV | worshipped by an unwilling worshipper; and so even to the Aegyptians
3180 Ana | 41). ~3. You accuse us of worthlessness to trade,—a charge which
3181 XIV | Trojans and Greeks : Venus wounded by an arrow shot by human
3182 VII | punishment and for which Divine wrath would be reserved? If then
3183 XXXV(94) | strangulation of Commodus by the wrestler Narcissus. Gibbon, i. 234. ~
3184 XVI | city 43, since a certain wretch, who hired himself out to
3185 XXV | indeed to found.' ~This wretched wife and sister of Jupiter
3186 L | yet you cast statues, and write inscriptions, and engrave
3187 XIV | do the tragic or comic writers spare them, so as to refrain
3188 App | will be observed that Pliny writes of them as belonging to
3189 I | secret agency of a silent writing. ~Christianity pleads no
3190 X | was named Saturnia. By him writing-tablets were first introduced, and
3191 II | other crimes. Then Trajan wrote back that persons of this
3192 VI | them 18; and silver mines wrought into dishes,—it were of
3193 XIX | CHAPTER XIX. ~The antiquity of these
3194 XL | CHAPTER XL. ~2. Our existence is supposed
3195 XLI | CHAPTER XLI. ~These judgements are attributable
3196 XLII | CHAPTER XLII. ~3. We are accused of being
3197 XLIII | CHAPTER XLIII. ~We are certainly profitless
3198 XLIV | CHAPTER XLIV. ~The real loss to the state
3199 XLIX | CHAPTER XLIX. ~IV. Why do you censure
3200 XLV | CHAPTER XLV. ~Our ethical standard is
3201 XLVI | CHAPTER XLVI. ~4. Our sect is regarded
3202 XLVII | CHAPTER XLVII. ~Philosophers have derived
3203 XVI | CHAPTER XVI. ~You hold grotesque views
3204 XX | CHAPTER XX. ~Their majesty and divinity
3205 XXI | CHAPTER XXI. ~We worship the same God
3206 XXIII | CHAPTER XXIII. ~These daemons and your
3207 XXVI | CHAPTER XXVI. ~All rule and sovereignty
3208 XXVII | CHAPTER XXVII. ~Your animosity against
3209 XXX | CHAPTER XXX. ~We offer for Caesar's
3210 XXXI | CHAPTER XXXI. ~And our prayers for him
3211 XXXII | CHAPTER XXXII. ~And rendered necessary
3212 XXXV | CHAPTER XXXV. ~We are called 'public
3213 XXXVI | CHAPTER XXXVI. ~We are necessarily well-disposed
3214 XXXVII | CHAPTER XXXVII. ~We are forbidden to retaliate,
3215 XXXVIII | CHAPTER XXXVIII. ~The Christian society
3216 XXXVIII | or the vain-glory of the xystus. You allowed the Epicuraeans
3217 XLVIII | end and mid-boundary which yawns between shall have come,
3218 | Yes
3219 XXXVII | the whole world! We are of yesterday, and yet we have filled
3220 XXXIII | it is man's interest to yield to God; let it be sufficient
3221 XXI | crucified He spontaneously yielded up His Spirit with a word,
3222 L | all pardon from Him by the yielding up of his blood? For all
3223 VIII | indispensable, one quite young, and ignorant of the meaning
3224 App | of Bithynia, of which the younger Pliny (a namesake of his
3225 III | wanton, how gay! What a youth! how profligate, how licentious!
3226 XLVI | him to be a corruptor of youths. The Christian does not
3227 XIX | sages and lawgivers. For Zacharias lived in the reign of Cyrus
3228 XLVII | partition formed by that fiery zone, the Elysian fields have
3229 VI(19) | ° Chap. XIII. ~
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