Chap., §
1 Int | stoical characters of the Old man, the Seven Brothers, and
2 I, 15 | worldly profit the things of man.~
3 I, 21 | 21 Anger, again, if a man will retrace the course
4 I, 24 | passions sprout up; and each man's Reason as master-gardener,
5 I, 32 | impulse.1 For he, a young man at the age when physical
6 I, 36 | 36 How else, can a man, naturally gormandizing
7 I, 37 | Certainly, as soon as a man orders his life according
8 I, 40 | affection for parents, so that a man may not for their sakes
9 I, 40 | that if~she transgress a man should rebuke her, and it
10 I, 40 | that if they are naughty a man should punish them, and
11 I, 40 | of friendship, so that a man should reprove his friends
12 I, 41 | overcome even hatred, so that a man refrains from cutting down
13 I, 48 | the day when God created man, he implanted in him his
14 I, 48 | the Law, by the which if a man order himself, he shall
15 II, 66 | 18 Onias, a man of the highest character,
16 II, 76 | an overweening terrible man; who dismissed Onias from
17 II, 83 | to force by tortures each man separately to eat unclean
18 II, 84 | drag there every single man of the Hebrews and compel
19 II, 85 | been taken by force, one man first from among the company
20 II, 85 | knowledge of the law, a man advanced in years and well
21 II, 86 | begin for you, O venerable man, I would give you this counsel,
22 III | the gentle spirited old man, shows such fortitude that
23 III, 108 | first they unclothed the old man, who was adorned with the
24 III, 110 | the great-souled and noble man, an Eleazar in very truth,
25 III, 110 | in a dream; yea, the old man keeping his eyes steadfastly
26 III, 112 | taking punishment, the old man outwore his tormentors.~
27 III, 124 | with these words the holy man nobly yielded up his spirit
28 IV, 130 | so well as did that holy man when his sacred soul was
29 IV, 134 | philosophy by~thy deeds, O aged man that wast more forceful
30 IV, 137 | of all, he, being an old man, with the sinews of his
31 IV, 137 | nerves weakened, grew a young man again in the spirit of his
32 IV, 139 | Assuredly, then, if an old man despised the torments unto
33 IV, 144 | wise and self-controlled man alone is the brave ruler
34 IV, 146 | impotent to compel an old man to eat unclean meat, then
35 IV, 149 | the madness of that old man who has already suffered,
36 V, 199 | at the bold speech of the man, and they dislocated his
37 V, 203 | 35 And when' this man had died worthily of his
38 V, 212 | 44 But when this man also was put to a death
39 V, 214 | enemy of virtue and enemy of man, for what crime dost thou
40 V, 220 | 52 And when this man also was dead, the sixth
41 VI, 237 | thou not ashamed, being a man, O wretch with the heart
42 VII, 292 | Reason lent her heart a man's strength under her passion
43 VII, 309 | wast found stronger than a man, in deeds as well as words.~
44 VII, 312 | shameful if, while this aged man endured the agony for religion'
45 VII, 314 | 40 And Daniel, the just man, was cast to the lions,
46 VIII, 317| the pyre in order that no man might touch her body.~
47 VIII, 327| the world and the life of man were the spectators.~
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